The Conjure guidelines on pg 126 of RoP:Faerie leave some ambiguity as it doesn't much limit you in terms of what sort of transformations you can do.
It's fairly easy when turning people from one thing to a completely unrelated thing, but what about turning them into similar things? How much specificity do you have?
If you transform yourself into a specific person, does the glamour cover your voice as well? Would you pick up parts of their personality and mannerisms?
Could you transform an injured human into a healthy one temporarily?
Could you turn a peasant into a professional soldier?
Could you turn a rabbit into a terrible wolf?
Can you specify what sort of creature the glamour makes them? Could you turn somebody into a hungry wolf instead of a normal one?
Could you transform somebody into a supernatural creature like a dragon?
Why does it make such a point about transforming into smaller shapes but gives far less detail about how to transform into something larger?
It's just as easy ... with a big caveat.
Remember that, as with all faerie wizardry, Conjure is limited by Sympathy. You must have a Faerie Sympathy/Antipathy covering the target and one (this is specific for Conjure, see RoP:F p.125) covering the result too. If the two are very close, the same Sympathy/Antipathy might cover both.
Yes, though keep in mind that "The final form of a target changed into glamour will usually have recognizable properties in common with its true shape.". So if you have a lisp, you'll probably exhibit one when transformed too. This is up to the Troupe; after a while you should develop a sense of what "feels right".
Probably, though this is up to the troupe.
Hmm.
I'd say no, if anything because there's a separate Faerie Power for that.
Though I guess you could transform an injured human into one who appears uninjured.
He'll suffer all the penalties of his injuries though, and may still bear "traces" of his injured state (e.g. being very pale) as per the "keep recognizable properties" rule above.
You could turn a peasant into someone who looks like a professional soldier, has the equipment of a professional soldier, and maybe has the mannerisms of one... but not necessarily the skills of the average professional soldier. In this sense see The Old Guard, p.125-126.
Yes, absolutely. Though it will probably be fond of carrots (troupe's call, that's how we'd play it).
Hmm, a hungry wolf appears to be just a normal wolf who's hungry, unless you mean something different. So no, you can't give "emotions" with Conjure. That's Beguile.
Yes, with with a sufficiently high effect.
The rules for turning into something bigger are actually very specific, though they could have been clearer. You must be able to cover the final target with sufficient magnitudes for its size. So, to turn a normal human into a size +8 giant, you need 3 extra magnitudes (the base effect would go up to size +1, and each magnitude adds 3 size to that). Smaller sizes need ad-hoc rules for every size bracket, for game balance presumably.