Number and person markers

Wistrish verbs agree with their direct subjects (subjective mode verbs) or their direct objects (objective mode verbs) in person and number, meaning that they change depending on what number or person the subject/object in question has.

There are 4 numbers in total (singular, dual, paucal and plural) and three persons (1st person, 2nd person and 3rd person). Each number-person pair has its own suffix:

Singular Dual Paucal Plural
1st person -(𐌷) -𐍅 -𐌲𐌺 -𐌼
2nd person -𐍃 -𐍄𐍃 -𐌺 -𐌸
3rd person -𐌸 -𐍄𐍃 -𐍇 -𐌽𐌳 / 𐌽

The red suffixes are devoiced: if they are directly followed by a vowel (which occurs before mode / mood specific endings or before particles starting with vowels such as -𐌿) they become voiced, while the black suffixes do not.

These rules apply to most tenses and moods (endings that contain one of the above suffixes are called filled endings), though in some cases (frequently in singular past tenses, but also in some specific forms of some moods) there are exceptions. Endings that do not contain the suffixes are called blank endings.

For Gothic speakers: As you have already noticed, there are a few differences between Wistrish and Gothic number-person suffixes. Unlike Gothic, Wistrish 3pSG consonant is never voiced, and unlike Gothic, Wistrish has a 3pDU ending, which is too never voiced.