Nomnom

Person: Intransitive, Transitive, Ditransitive, Tritransitive. Ditransitive mooches off place/manner, and tritransitive always mooches off manner. It's different depending on what kind of thing the argument is referring to and whether that thing being referred to is actually part of the sentence, making the language highly fusional. DIT = NOM ACC INSTR TRIT = NOM ACC INSTR GEN Time: This can be generic or specific. This usually takes numbers, and it can be conflated with aspect, so this leads to things like generic future ONCE being future momentane, essentially. Manner: This is the most fluid. It can end up being filled up with "an" (filler particle). Place: It's the ending or starting point of the action, or the place in which the thing described by the action takes place.

There are a lot of subtle holes, but I don't know which

Aps ois. I eat it.

Grammar
Sentence Structure

Technically, the sentence structure should be rigid, but it isn't.

Verbs

Verbs do not conjugate for manner, place, cause, or time. However, they do conjugate for case applied to thing (so they apply to person in a kind of detached way).

Pronouns