Regularly. Subjective time tense. Indicates that the event occurs regularly. When tagging a sumti, the sumti specifies the interval during which the event occurs regularly.
fi'o jai ze'a dikni
Irregularly. Subjective time tense. Indicates that the event occurs irregularly. When tagging a sumti, the sumti specifies the interval during which the event occurs irregularly.
fi'o jai ze'a naldikni
I don't think {di'i nai} should have a separate definition. Under the regularized meaning of {nai} with tenses, {di'i nai} is self-explanatory.
typically — A subjective time tense modifier indicating a typical interval.
Typically. Subjective time tense. Indicates that the event typically occurs. When tagging a sumti, the sumti specifies the interval during which the typical event occurs.
atypically — A subjective time tense modifier indicating an atypical interval.
(Literally "I'm atypically sure.", but this doesn't seem to convey the same meaning in English.)
continuously — A subjective time tense modifier indicating a continuous interval.
occasionally — A subjective time tense modifier indicating an occasional interval.
(Former translation:"Truthfully, I'm occasionally paying attention.")
habitually — A subjective time tense modifier indicating a habitual interval.
(This one was difficult to translate directly, so this is extremely glossed.)
non-habitually — A subjective time tense modifier indicating a non-habitual interval.
The question has been brought up, "What do these mean as tcita?". Our best guess so far has been the time during which the interval takes place. {.i broda ta'e lo brode} is {.i ta'e broda ca lo brode} (best I can explain). Note, this has actually NOT been covered in CLL. It does not state in Chapter 10, nor anywhere else in the book that I've found, that TAhE can actually be used as a tcita (it can, says machine grammar) or what it means semantically. - lindar