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G-eazy verbs have a __ in the yo form. After that, they follow regular conjugations. a) -s

b) -es
c) -ies
d) -ing

1 Answer

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Final answer:

The 'G-eazy verbs' in Spanish have a '-go' ending in the 'yo' form for the present tense, not '-s', '-es', '-ies', or '-ing'. Options provided in the question seem to contain a typo.

Step-by-step explanation:

The phrase 'G-eazy verbs' likely refers to a specific subset of Spanish irregular verbs that have an alteration in the 'yo' (I) form in the present tense.

These verbs usually have a change in the stem or a change in the ending for the 'yo' form only, and after that alteration, they follow regular conjugation patterns for the other persons (tú, él/ella, nosotros, vosotros, ellos/ellas). The correct answer is that G-eazy verbs have a '-go' in the 'yo' form, as in 'hago' from the verb 'hacer' (to do/make).

There isn't an option that exactly matches this description among a), b), c), or d), so it appears there is a mistake or typo in the provided options. However, option b) '-es' is the closest one as it is a common conjugation for '-er' and '-ir' verbs in the 'yo' form, but 'go' would be the accurate suffix for the irregular G-eazy verbs.