+Verb stems produced by derivation are inflected for aspect, mood,
+number, and person.
+One affix marks aspect and mood, a prefix marks person, and a suffix
+marks number, with aspect-mood applied before person and number (such
+that an aspect-mood prefix follows the person prefix and an aspect-mood
+suffix precedes the number prefix).
+The verb agrees in person and number with the syntactic subject (the
+noun or pronoun in the nominative case).
+
+The indicative mood uses a prefix for aspect-mood in the continuous
+aspect, a suffix in the habitual aspect, and the plain stem in the
+perfective aspect.
+The indicative habitual suffix is identical to the continuous prefix.
+In contrast, the optative and subjunctive moods uniformly use suffixes
+for aspect-mood and do not distinguish the continuous and habitual
+aspects.
+All of these aspect-mood aspects are indicated in the table below (with
+the hyphen marking where the stem is attached):
+
+| mood | continuous | habitual | perfective |
+|-------------|------------|----------|------------|
+| indicative | bi- | -bi | - |
+| optative | -r | -r | -n |
+| subjunctive | -l | -l | -m |
+
+The number suffixes for verbs differ depending on whether they follow a
+vowel or a consonant, and are listed in the table below:
+
+| number | after vowel | after consonant |
+|----------|-------------|-----------------|
+| singular | -g | - |
+| plural | -hē | -ē |
+
+The person suffixes are invariant and are listed in the table below:
+
+| person | prefix |
+|--------|--------|
+| 1st | kʰo- |
+| 2nd | tm- |
+| 3rd | - |
+
+As an example, here are a few inflections of the 2nd-form non-past
+stem "méndikʰ" (write):
+
+* biméndikʰē: they are writing (indicative non-past continuous
+ 3rd-person plural)
+* tmbiméndikʰ: you(sg.) are writing (indicative non-past continuous
+ 2nd-person singular)
+* kʰoméndikʰnē: we write (indicative non-past perfective 1st-person plural)
+