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Salgo

Salgo is the first-person singular present indicative form of the Spanish verb salir, meaning "I leave" or "I go out." The verb salir has a broad range of senses, including departing from a place, exiting a space, or beginning an activity. It is commonly used in everyday speech to indicate that the speaker is leaving, such as "Yo salgo de casa" (I leave the house) or "Salgo a caminar" (I go out for a walk). In addition to literal departure, salir is used in expressions that describe going out with someone or turning out in certain contexts, for example "salgo con mis amigos" (I go out with my friends).

Etymology and related forms: salir derives from Latin salire, meaning to leap or spring forth. The verb

Usage notes: Because salgo signals an action in the present, it is typically accompanied by prepositional phrases

is
highly
irregular
across
tenses,
with
a
characteristic
stem
change
in
some
forms
and
a
separate
irregular
stem
in
others.
For
example,
present
tense
forms
include
yo
salgo,
tú
sales,
él/ella
sale,
nosotros/as
salimos,
vosotros/as
salís,
ellos/as
salen.
The
future
and
conditional
use
the
stem
saldr-
(saldré,
saldría).
The
non-present
forms
include
el/ella
salió
(preterite),
yo
salí
(preterite),
and
salido
as
the
past
participle.
Subjunctive
forms
use
a
different
stem,
such
as
que
yo
salga.
to
specify
origin,
destination,
or
purpose
(de
la
casa,
a
las
ocho,
a
correr).
As
a
common
verb,
it
appears
frequently
in
instructions,
narratives,
and
dialogues,
and
it
forms
the
basis
for
related
expressions
with
different
nuances
of
leaving,
exiting,
or
starting
an
activity.