Seratofian verb paradigm

Seratofian verb paradigm is the complete set of grammar rules which modify a verb root to convey grammatical and semantic information that satisfy a variety of both grammatical categories and day-to-day needs. The overall verb paradigm in Seratofian is best described in terms of 'windows' (Seratofian: žéli) as conjugation is seen in term of a combination of tense-aspect-positivity rather than a whole set block which determine the whole conjugation set, rather the windows system is a set of preverbs and endings for that specific combination. In general, a different mood will be the namesake of its own set of windows, with the example of the indicative windows, subjunctive windows, etc..

General characteristics
Verbs in Seratofian have one base infinitive, which can be derived into three more "additional infinitives" (sometimes referred to as 'child infinitives') for a total of four infinitives. Infinitives are divided up into positivity (positive and negative), as well as perfectness (perfect and imperfect). The imperfect-positive infinitive serves as the base infinitive in all Seratofian verbs. Specific tenses do not have their own infinitives and are subject to the four total infinitives found in modern Seratofian.

Modern Seratofian distinguishes three major moods (indicative, subjunctive, conditional), one minor mood (imperative), three basic tenses (past, present, future), two major aspects (imperfect and perfect) as well as two minor aspects (simple and continuous). These three are organized into what is known as a window system as previously mentioned and are categorized into sub-windows of specific moods by either its preverb, first and third person singular present tense endings, or even both.