ending in oi change to ô; e.g., vomoi:vomô 'I think.' Those ending in ui change to ú; e.g., cui:cú 'I eat.'
The preterit is formed by adding ta to the present tense; e.g., naróta 'I learned,' vomôta 'I thought,' cúta 'I ate.'
The pluperfect is formed by changing the final a of the preterit to e and adding the verb gozaru in the present and gozatta in the past, in the same way as we have described for the first conjugation; e.g., naróte gozaru or narǒte gozatta 'I have already learned.'
The future is formed by changing the final i of the root to vó, vózu, or vózuru; e.g., naravó, naravǒzu, or naravózuru 'I shall learn.' If the root ends in oi it is changed to vô, vôzu, or vôzuru [vǒ, vǒzu, (31 or vǒzuru]; e.g., vomoi:vomouô, vomovozu, or vomovôzuru [vomoi:vomovǒ, vomovǒzu, or vomovǒzuru] 'I shall think.'[[92]]
The imperative is formed by placing e after the root; e.g., naraie 'learn!' toie 'ask!' cuie 'eat!'[[93]] It is also formed by removing the syllable nu from the negative present tense and replacing it with the letter i; e.g., naravai 'learn!' tovai 'ask!' cuvai 'eat!' This form is used when addressing inferiors, as are those of the other conjugations.
The Third Negative Conjugation
The root of the third negative conjugation is formed by changing the i of the affirmative root to vazu; e.g., naravazu, tovazu, and cuvazu. The present tense is formed by changing the i to vanu; e.g., naravanu 'I do not learn,' tovanu 'I do not ask,' cuvanu 'I do not eat.'
The preterit is formed by changing the i of the root to vananda; e.g., naravananda 'I did not learn,' tovananda 'I did not ask,' cuvananda 'I did not eat.'
The pluperfect is formed by changing the final a of the preterit to e and adding the verb gozaru or gozatta; e.g., cuvanande gozatta 'I had
not eaten,' or naravanande gozaru 'I had not learned.' The remaining forms are like the other conjugations.[[94]]