Pedulist Conlang

The Pedulist Conlang is a conlang developed by Kyle Chayka Doge for his new religion: Pedulism (Pedulism wiki not created yet).

Grammar
The Pedulist Grammar is as follows:  +  +  + . An example of the same:

ÇÖtätha ÇÖtäl äsäl BÖrés.

Literal translation: The chair is being sat on by me

Translation to active voice: I am sitting on the chair

In Pedulist, unlike English, the passive voice is the most commonly used voice and the active voice does not exist.

If you do not know what an active and passive voice is, here's a short recap of the 6th grade:

active voice: Jimmy threw the ball

passive voice: The ball was thrown by Jimmy

Here, "The ball" is the object, and Jimmy is the subject.

Yes, this is useful in English.

example: The passive voice is often maligned by teachers and professors as a bad writing habit.

Here, "The passive voice" is an object, "often maligned" is the verb, and "teachers and professors" is the subject.

In case you haven't caught on:

I T  '  S   I  N   P  A  S  S  I  V  E   V  O  I  C  E   :  )

Anyway, the reason for the similarities between ÇÖtätha (Chair) and ÇÖtäl (present simple tense for "to sit") is because the action of "sitting" is done on a chair. ÇÖtätha is a derivative of ÇÖtäl. This gives us a new topic:

Word Formation (mostly complete)
As Pedulist is a new language, I (Kyle Chayka Doge) have decided to come up with a systematic way to produce terms. Words are first produced as root forms of verbs (example in Fig . 1.1), then, the verb is turned into an infinitive by adding 'a' (shown as ä in ÇÖtä because it's an exception), to show a process that is usually used for continuous forms of the verb, we add 'thä' as nouns must end in th. For the same reason, ÇÖtätha ends in 'tha', which is used for derivatives of verbs. Past tense is added using n, and present tense and future tenses are produced by adding the suffixes -l and -nt respectively. Nouns, as stated above, always end in -th. Derivatives of nouns formed by verbs end in -thé, as shown in fig 1. 2, where Boröntathé (potion) and Borötathé (water) are sub-derivatives of the word Borétatha (beverage)