Try using some Roman-alphabet transcription. There aren't many of us who can read the Phoenician alphabet.
Also, I don't think that I have the patience to give a complete introduction to Indo-European and Semitic linguistics. It should be obvious that Phoenician and Hebrew are much closer to Arabic, for instance, than to Latin or Greek. So I went to
Verbix verb conjugator and found some verb conjugations. I filled in its gaps with Wikipedia and other sources. I used the plain present. Here are all the Indo-European ones, either ancient ones or medieval/modern ones:
English: -, -, -s / -, -, -
Old English: -, -st, -th, / -ath, -ath, -ath
Dutch: -, -t, -t / -en, -en, -en
German: -e, -st, -t / -en, -t, -en
Danish, Norwegian, Swedish: -r
Icelandic: -, -r, -r / -um, -idh, -a
Old Norse: -, -r, -r / -um, -idh, -a
Old Swedish: -er, -er, -er / -om, -in, -a
Runic Swedish: -r, -r, -r / -um, -in -a
Proto-Norse: -u, -ir, -idh / -um, -edh, -an
Gothic: -a, -is, -ith / -ôs, -ats / -am, -ith, -and
Proto-Germanic: -ô, -si, -thi / -amaz, -ith, -anthi
Irish: -m, -onn, -onn / -mid, -onn, -onn (2nd 3rd -onn or -ann)
Welsh: -af, -i, -a / -wn, -wch, -ant
Proto-Celtic: -û -mi, -si, -ti / -mu, -te, -nte
Polish: -e, -sz, - / -my, -cie, -a
Czech: -m, -sh, -te /-me, -te, -
Slovak: -m, -sh, - / -me, -te, -ju
Serbo-Croatian: -m, -sh, - / -mo, -te, -ju
Bulgarian: -a -m, -sh, - / -m, -te, -at -t
Russian: -ju, -sh', -t / -m, -tje, -jut -jat
Old Church Slavonic: -o, -shi, -tu / -mu, -te, -etu -otu
Lithuanian: -u, -i, -a / -ame, -ate, -a
Latin: -ô, -s, -t / -mus, -tis, -nt
Classical Greek: -ô, -eis, -ei / -omen, -ete, -ousin ... -mi, -s, -sin / -men, -te, -asin
Sanskrit: -âmi, -asi, -ati / -âmah, -atha, -anti ... -mi, -si, -ti / -mas, -tha, -anti
Proto-Indo-European: -oH -mi, -si, -ti / -mos, -te, -nti