Faynese

Verbs
The conjugation of verbs is demonstrated using the verb pusano (to be). As Faynese is a agglutinative language, it uses a lot of suffixes to conjugate verbs. The suffixes are added in the following order:

Even though you always have to use all suffixes on a verb to express its exact meaning, one can also drop some suffixes in some circumstances:
 * One can usually drop the mood and voice suffixes for the combination "indicative + active" because the majority of statements use this combination. Because of this "I am" could be both "pusacin" and "pusan".
 * If a sentence contains two or more verbs that have the same qualities (tense, mood, voice, person & number), the first verbs contains all suffixes while the rest of the verbs drop them all.

In addition to the 3 simple tenses, Faynese also has complex "tenses" that are formed with a conjugated form of "pusano" + a participle. These complex tenses can only appear with a simple tense because they express time differences between actions. Both past and future can form all three complex tenses, but the present can only form the first complex tense (because "before the present" is the past and "after the present" is the future).

Also note that the complex tenses do not leave their respective tense - meaning that "past of pusano + future participle" happened after a past event but it still happened in the past. Therefore, the overall tense order for Faynese verbs would be: