Imperative.—It simply consists in the root.
Subjunctive.—It has two forms. The first consists in in prefixing to the root the particle ma; the second form consists in replacing the first two letters of the root with the prefix maa. As
| from | dinhi, | madínhi, | maánhi |
| from,, | didí. | madidí, | maadí |
| from,, | didâ, | madidâ | maadâ |
| from,, | didton, | madidton, | mandton |
| from,, | dithon, | madithon, | maathon |
| from,, | didto, | madidto, | maadto. |
NOTE—The form mahani is a transformation of maanhi like hahani of aanhi.
The verbs that supply the English “to come” and “to go” are conjugated as ordinarily. But they have a basis for conjugation, derived from the original root, and which we call conjugational root. So from the original roots
dinhi, didí, didá, didton, dithon, didto,
we have the corresponding conjugational roots:
cánhi, cadi, cadá, cadton, cathon, cádto. [[87]]
The form followed in this conjugation is that of a primitive. Thus from the root “canhi”, we have:
Infinitive, present and present participle: pagcanhi (to come, coming)