Ok, I wanted to post the full set of pronomial prefixes for the "A" class stems, and also clarify a few points:
-adö́gweta’ - to be well, healthy, good
gadö́gweta’ - I am well
agadö́gweta’ - we (d.e.) are well (full prefix is yag-)
agwadö́gweta’ - we (e.) are well (full prefix is yagw-)
jadö́gweta’ (džadö́gweta’) - we (d.i.) are well
dwadö́gweta’ - we (i.) are well
sadö́gweta’ - you (s.) are well
snyadö́gweta’ - you (d.) are well
swadö́gweta’ - you (p.) are well
hadö́gweta’ - he is well
hyadö’gweta’ - they (m.d.) are well
hënödö́gweta’ - they (m.) are well
yödö́gweta’ - she is well
gyadö́gweta’ - they (f.d.) are well
wënödö́gweta’ - they (f.) are well
yadö́gweta’ - it is well
(Some of these may be hypothetical forms)
Abbreviations:
d. - dual
e. - exclusive
i. - inclusive
s. - singular (I only marked it where the English doesn't make it clear)
p. - plural (I only marked it where the English doesn't make it clear)
f. - female agents
m. - masculine agents
I'm curious what would be used if there was a mixed group (3rd person). My intuition says the masculine plural.
yödö́gweta’ (yö- she, which "swallows" the <a> of the root)
It seems the reason this happens is because the underlying sequence is <ye-> + <-a> (of the root), which yields <yö->
hadö́gweta’ (ha- he, which also "swallows" the <a> of the root)
The grammar, interestingly enough, describes this prefix simply as <h->.