Xwtek wrote: ↑Thu Nov 14, 2019 10:38 amAny fusional conlang for reference? I failed to think of any other fusional conlang system. Sakha's morphology (the fusional part) is just a distance away from typical Indo-European verb conjugation (Person>Egophoricity(later, it also gets evidential), Number>Pluractional, with added layers of agglutinative affix).
I don't know how much weirdness you're looking for here, the system of Sakha/Yakut seems very non-European just as you describe it.
Egophoricity, evidentiality, pluractionality, what is all that to a European speaker?
I'm assuming you're asking about conjugation axes within a single TAM.
In various ancient Indo-European languages, voice was at least partially merged into the subject-agreement suffixes, e.g. Latin 2PL.ACTV -Vtis and 2PL.PASS -Vminī, Ancient Greek 3PL.ACTV -Vsin/Vsan/Vien and 3PL.PASS -Vntai/-Vnto.
Afro-Asiatic languages also include the gender of the subject, which in various sub-branches results in some pretty heavy fusion of person, number, gender and tense (contrast Standard Arabic -uu 'PAST.3PL.MASC', -na 'PAST.3PL.FEM' and -aa 'PAST.3DUAL.MASC').
In Inuktitut, subject agreement suffixes include interrogativity, i.e. whether the verb is in a statement (STMT) or a question (Q), including content questions.
Sinikpa?
sinik-p-a
sleep-Q-3SG
'Is s/he sleeping?'
Siniktuq.
sinik-t-uq
sleep-STMT-3SG
'S/he's sleeping.'
Nani nunaqaqpit?
nani nuna-qaq-p-it
where house-POSS-Q-2SG
'Where do you live?' ("Where do you have a house?")
Inuktitut verbs agree for both subject and object, and the agreement suffixes are pretty fused:
1SG intransitive, or with non-specific object, in a statement or question: -uŋa
1SG to specific 3SG in a statement: -ara
1SG to specific 3SG in a question: -igu
1SG intransitive, or with non-specific 3SG object, in a reason clause: -ama
1SG to specific 3SG in a reason clause: -akku
umik 'beard'
umilik 'bearded man' (morphologically umik-lik, /k/ drops before an l-initial suffix)
Umiliŋmik kapiyuŋa.
umilik-mik kapi-y-uŋa
bearded.man-ACC stabbed-STMT-1SG
'I stabbed a bearded man.'
Umiliŋmik kapivuŋa?
umilik-mik kapi-v-uŋa
bearded.man-ACC stabbed-Q-1SG
'Did I stab a bearded man?'
Linguoboy kapiyara.
linguoboy kapi-y-ara
Linguoboy stabbed-STMT-1SG>3SG
'I stabbed Linguoboy.'
Linguoboy kapivigu?
linguoboy kapi-v-igu
Linguoboy stabbed-Q-1SG>3SG
'Did I stab Linguoboy?'
Umiliŋmik kapigama...
umilik-mik kapi-g-ama
bearded.man-ACC stabbed-REASON-1SG
'Because I stabbed a bearded man, I...'
Linguoboy kapigakku...
linguoboy kapi-g-akku
Linguoboy stabbed-REASON-1SG>3SG
'Because I stabbed Linguoboy, I...'