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Answer:this should help atleast a little
Explanation:
The so-called G-verbs (sometimes "go-verbs" or "yo-go" verbs) add a medial -g- (-ig- when the root ends in a vowel) in the first person singular, present tense, as well as in all persons of the present subjunctive. Many of these verbs are also irregular in other ways. For example:
poner: yo pongo, tú pones...
tener: yo tengo, tú tienes...
caer: yo caigo, tú caes...
traer: yo traigo, tú traes...
oír: yo oigo, tú oyes...
venir: yo vengo , tú vienes...
hacer: yo hago, tú haces...
salir: yo salgo, tú sales...
valer: yo valgo, tThese verbs fall into three categories:
hacer: this verb (and similar ones like rehacer) has its own irregularities.
asir, oír, poner, salir, tener, valer, venir: these verbs (and related ones) simply add a g, e.g. "poner -> pono -> pongo"
caer, traer: these verbs (and related ones) simply add ig: "caer -> cao -> caigo"
There are around 80 verbs like this in Spanish, but they are all derived from the ones listed above.ú vales...
What the verbs salir, decir and venir have in common is that they all have an ending -ir in the infinitive which, when conjugated in the first person of the present tense, becomes -go.
Conjugation of verbs "salir," "decir," and "venir."
Although in appearance these three verbs mentioned do not have greater similarity than their ending -ir in the infinitive, since they are not all stem-changing verbs or of the same style, there is a great similarity in their conjugation in Present Tense, with the personal pronoun " yo:"
- Yo salgo
- Yo digo
- Yo vengo
As can be identified, when these verbs are conjugated with the first person in the present tense, the ending -ir changes to -go in all cases, creating a clear relationship between them, a relationship that they share with other verbs such as "caer," "valer" or "obtener:"
Yo caigo
Yo valgo
Yo obtengo
More information:
https://brainly.com/question/14042507