-ajö

Etymology
From. Cognates in most other Cariban languages do not allow any person marking; this innovation seems largely restricted to Ye'kwana and languages of the Panare and Pemon groups.

Usage notes
This suffix can trigger syllable reduction on the preceding syllable. The suffix takes the form when the preceding syllable is reducible and has an onset of,  when the preceding syllable ends in , and  in other contexts. When the final vowel of the preceding syllable is or  and the stem is three or more syllables long, that vowel changes to  and forms a single (long) syllable with the  of this suffix; final stem vowels of  also merge into a single long syllable.

Person markers referring to interlocutors on a verb nominalized with this suffix are uncommon outside of conditional subordinates formed with a nominalization in and the postposition.