VAI (Verb Animate Intransitive)
VAI stems can end in one of six different vowels : -e, -aa, -ii, -uu, -i, -u.
| Ending | Example | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| e | ᓂᒣᑕᐧᐁᓐ | ![]()  | 
nimetawe-n | I am playing | 
| aa | ᓂᓂᐹᓐ | ![]()  | 
ninipaa-n | I am sleeping | 
| ii | ᓅᐦᒌᓐ | ![]()  | 
nuuhchii-n | I come from… | 
| uu | ᓂᓃᐴᓐ | ![]()  | 
niniipuu-n | I am standing | 
| i | ᓂᑕᐱᓐ | ![]()  | 
nitapi-n | I am sitting | 
| u | ᓂᓂᑲᒧᓐ | ![]()  | 
ninikamu-n | I am singing | 
Link to the Conjugation Table.
For stems ending in -uu, and -i, a stem vowel can dissapear in the third person proximate independent indicative. (This is called “vowel coalescence” for what happens to -uu, and “vowel harmony” for what happens to -i):
| ᓃᐴ-ᐅ | niipuu-u | → | ᓃᐴ | ![]()  | 
niipuu | s/he is standing | (one u disappears) | 
| ᐊᐱ-ᐅ | api-u | → | ᐊᐴ | ![]()  | 
apuu | s/he is sitting | (the i becomes u) | 
VAI verbs with stems ending in -n, have a special behaviour. The nasal vowel n becomes h in the 3rd person proximate inflection in the conjunct indicative paradigms (#11 and #12).
| ᐱᒥᔑᓐ | ![]()  | 
pimishin (#10) | → | ᐁ ᐱᒥᔑᐦᒃ | ![]()  | 
e pimishih-k (#11) | whenever s/he is lying down | 
| → | ᐱᒥᔑᐦᑫ | ![]()  | 
pimishih-ke (#12a) | when s/he is going to lie down | |||
| → | ᐯᒥᔑᐦᒃᐦ | ![]()  | 
pemishih-kh (#12b) | every time s/he lies down | 
Note that the third person proximate conjunct suffix for vai n-stem verbs is -k rather than the -t used with vowel stems.
See the Conjugation Table for n-stems.
VAI aa, e, and n stems use a shorter passive suffix (unspecified actor form): they shorten the -naanuu suffix or merge it with the stem. Compare:
| Stem | Person | |||||
| aa | X | ᓂᐹᓅ | nipaa+naanuu=nipaanuu | people sleep, there is a sleepover | (short suffix: -nuu) | |
| e | X | ᒣᑕᐧᐋᓅ | metuwe+naanuu=metawaanuu | people play, there is playing | (short suffix: -aanuu) | |
| n | X | ᑕᑯᔑᓈᓅ | takushin+naanuu=takushinaanuu | people arrive, there an arrival | (short suffix: -aanuu) | |
| Other stems | ||||||
| u | X | ᓂᑲᒧᓈᓅ | nikamu+naanuu=nikamunaanuu | people sing, there is a singing event | (regular suffix: -naanuu) | 
The same happens for the X’ forms (unspecified actor Obviative): the long suffix -naanuuyuu becomes -nuuyuu after an aa stem, or -aanuuyuu with an e or n stem.
           Grammar
        