Northern Sámi and Norwegian/bidix
The most complex part of the bidix is probably the verb section. A typical one looks like:
<e><p><l>vurket<s n="V"/><s n="TV"/></l><r>oppbevare<s n="vblex"/><s n="pers"/></r></p><par n="__verb"/></e>
where "pers" marks that the agent is typically animate, and __verb handles the changes in tags for person, number, temps. However, we can also have another pardef which does the same thing but also adds a causative tag "caus" which is picked up by transfer:
<e><p><l>divuhit<s n="V"/><s n="TV"/></l><r>reparere<s n="vblex"/><s n="pers"/></r></p><par n="caus__verb"/></e>
Here transfer will try to make a causative construction with this verb. Similarly, with
<e><p><l>viidánit<s n="V"/><s n="IV"/></l><r>spre<s n="vblex"/><s n="pers"/></r></p><par n="refl__verb"/></e>
we get a reflexive (seg/meg/...) added by transfer on seeing the "refl" tag, and with
<e><p><l>suovganit<s n="V"/><s n="IV"/></l><r>slite<s n="vblex"/><s n="pers"/></r></p><par n="pass__verb"/></e>
we get a "pass" tag and a passive construction, with a participle (here: "bli slitt"). However, with the passive, the predicate might also be an adjective, which we mark like this:
<e><p><l>viessat<s n="V"/><s n="IV"/></l><r>trøtt<s n="adj"/><s n="pers"/></r></p><par n="pass__verb"/></e>
It's up to transfer (mainly the chunker, t1x) to make sense of these tag combinations.