Hepano-kanano

Conjugation
Verbs can conjugate for person, tense, quality of sleep and dreams, and volition. Person and tense are the only required conjugations, and can be excluded if they can be interpreted from context.

This chart shows the person and tense conjugations, which replace the -a on the verb.

To be
Hepano kanano has no verb for "to be". Instead, there's "ga" for existence, "kiva" for location, and "jesema" for names. To describe the long and short term characteristics, you put the marker "-tja" on an adjective to make it a verb, and "-henatja" on a noun.

Example: "ojiotja" means "I'm sad".

Adjectives
Adjectives describe the first non-adjective to the left of themselves in a sentence.

Questions
To ask a yes-no question, "-ig" is added to the end of the verb a question is being asked about. Ex: "hejeig ghoet" "Are you good?"

All other questions are asked by adding "-ge" to the end of the verb a question is being asked about in place of an interrogative (who, what, etc.). The type of question being asked is determined by the listener through context. Ex: "hejege" "How do you feel?"