Present Indicative: Contract Verbs

Why contract? Because, if the stem ends in α, ε or ο, for reasons of fluency of speech, that stem α, ε or ο combines with the ending. In Attic Greek anyway.
Look at English: We say things like "doesn't, won't, he's gone, they've left, the're not here". Why? Because it's easier - for us! That's elision, the Greeks do that too. But they found out that for them, contracting action verbs was also easier. For them!
 
 
  lives, is living, is dwelling 
  
οἰκ ω   becomes  οἰκ  
οἰκ εις   becomes  οἰκ εῖς 
οἰκ ει   becomes  οἰκ εῖ 
οἰκ ομεν   becomes  οἰκ οῦμεν 
οἰκ ετε   becomes  οἰκ εῖτε 
οἰκ ουσιν   becomes  οἰκ οῦσιν 

 
 Note 
 
All the endings are regular, only the stem has changed: it has lost its end vowel, ε in this case. And that vowel has combined with the regular endings, lenghtening them. But this ε was an accented and the accent has remained with it, changing to a circumflex to let us know that it really is 2 syllables fused into one.
 
Contraction Rules
unaccented accented
  ε + ω     becomes      ω        + ω     becomes          
  ε + ει     become    ει        + ει     become    εῖ    
  ε + ε       + ε   
  ε + ο     become    ου        + ο     become    οῦ    
  ε + ου       + ου