Krono Gallifreyan is written from cause to effect. The most important words are at the beginning of the sentence and the least important words are at the end. Sentences are written in an order that keeps cohesiveness but if possible mentions the most important things first and the least important things latter. There are three parts of speech: nouns, verbs, and adjectives. Words can be modified by the words noun, verb, and adjective in order to change them into a part of speech they are not normally used for. For instance, purple the adjective can be turned into purple the noun.
Adjectives can modify any word, even another adjective. They are put directly in front of the word they are describing. In order to use more than one adjective to describe one word use the word 'and' in between adjectives. Otherwise the first adjective would modify the second.
YaFe Ni ShaCho SaPeNo - iNSaNe aND KiND HuMaN - Insane and kind human
YaFe ShaCho SaPeNo - iNSaNe KiND PeRSoN - Insanely kind human
Verbs describe the surrounding nouns. It is described in the order that makes the most sense. For instance "PiZza eaT i" would mean "I eat pizza" not "The pizza ate me" In order to specify that the pizza was the one eating, directional tense must be used. See that page for more information. A very long sentence circle would therefore usually be in the form of noun, verb, noun, verb, noun with adjectives in between. A verb can be made into its opposite by putting the word not or YiGu in front of it.
I FiND BooK NoT HaVe aDJeCTiVe TWeNTY THRee PaGe - I find the book and it does not have page number twenty three
A lot of verbs are used without conjugation. This is the case when stating facts and usually when talking about the present as well. When needed, there are three main types of tenses: time tenses, infinitive tense, and directional tense. Time tenses are used when specifying the time that a specific action took place in terms of a somethings timeline. This is comparative to English past, present, and future tense. Present tense should be used sparingly and only when it is necessary to specify something is happening at the current moment. Directional tenses are used when a subject and object need to be identified. For example, the cat bit the dog , versus, the dog bit the cat. Each of these tenses are or will be explained in more detail on their subsequent pages.
When using English-Krono Gallifreyan (Krono grammar and alphabet with English words) the verbs should be reduced to their infinitive form without the to. For instance "I wanted to tell you" would be "I BuPeRiWaNT TeLl You"