Verb Agreement
Verbs are either univalent or bivalent and verb forms are either finite or attributive.
Univalent attributive forms simply append -u to the stem and univalent finite forms append a person-number suffix. These are the same as the noun possessor suffixes:
K: -k, KP: -ka
L: -s, LP: -sa
M: -p, MP: -pa
3rd person: 0
Impersonal: -n
An /a/ may be inserted as with nouns.
Bivalent verbs have an A-argument and a P-argument. Bivalent attributive forms append a person-number suffix, possibly an inversion suffix -i, and finally -u. The person-number suffix is the same as above with the addition of:
Reflexive: -r
The inversion suffix isn't used with the reflexive suffix; it makes the person-number suffix refer to the A-argument instead of the P-argument. Examples (assuming statements):
kyat tansu (direct) "the cat that sees you"
kyat tankyu (inverse) "the cat I see"
kyat tanru (reflexive) "the cat that sees itself"
Bivalent finite forms append a person-number suffix, possibly an inversion suffix -i, and another person-number suffix. The persons are hierarchical:
K > L > 3 > Unspecified > Reflexive
with the higher of the 2 persons used for the latter suffix and the lower for the former. If needed, an /a/ is inserted before the suffix complex, but never between suffixes. Examples (also assuming statements):
tanask. (direct) "I see you."
tansik. (indirect) "You see me."
tanrk. (reflexive) "I see myself."
Note that if exactly one argument is 3rd person, it will be the former if the other argument is local (i.e. K(P), L(P), or M(P)) but the latter if the other is Unspecified, due to the hierarchy:
tans kyat. (tan-0-0-s) "You see the cat."
tanan kyat. (tan-n-0-0) "The cat sees."
(both examples are direct, hence the additional -0).