Adwan/Irregular Verbs

Irregular verbs, though not as abundant as they are in other languages such as English, are quite common amongst importat, common vowels in Adwan. Irregular verbs pose problems in Adwan, for while some are merely person-conjugation changes and keep regular verb affixes, others completely alter them.

The consistency between irregular verbs is not very good, as many of them differ in the typs of irregularities.

To Be: Þuðan
The verb Þuðan, or to be, is, naturally, rather irregular. There are literally three forms of the verb þuðan; a conjugation, a contraction, and a participle. Normally, verbs in Adwan don't technically have participles, instead using their roots as the main stem for affixes and such.

The contraction as a middle ground between emphasis and regularity. It is usually used in an informal context, where emphasis is still being used, while using the pronoun sounds a bit more sofisticated.

The participle is the main root used when affixes are attached to the verb, therefore þus means you are, but to say you were, you would use the past participle, which for the second person is Enú. One regular thing about the verb þuðan is that it still ustilizes the same affixes used with other verbs.

To Go - Ton
The verb for to go, Ton, is different from the verb to be. While the conjugation and affixes change, the past participle stays the same for Ton. Note that only tense and aspect affixes change. Voice, mood and polarity affixes remain the same, as do other verb modifiers (the supine ďy-/ďyk, the gerund na-/nan-, etc).