Le gustan means 'he likes them'.
Gustan is a form of the word "gustar" which means "to like" Depending on the usage, the same word can mean "flavor" or "tastes like" The phrase "you gustan" is meaningless since there is no such word as "you" in Spanish. ¿Te gustan? = Do you like them? (can refer to the food you are eating) Te gustan - You like them (can refer to food you are eating) Le gustan - He likes them Les gustan - They like them Me gustan - I like them
"Le gustan" in Spanish means "he/she likes" or "they like." It is used to express that someone has a preference or enjoys something.
"Gustan los dulces" translates to "you like sweets" in English.
"De cos as que te gustan" appears to be a misspelled or misinterpreted phrase. However, it could be translated as "things that you like" in English.
qui a le ... means 'who has the ... / which has the ...'
Gustan is a form of the word "gustar" which means "to like" Depending on the usage, the same word can mean "flavor" or "tastes like" The phrase "you gustan" is meaningless since there is no such word as "you" in Spanish. ¿Te gustan? = Do you like them? (can refer to the food you are eating) Te gustan - You like them (can refer to food you are eating) Le gustan - He likes them Les gustan - They like them Me gustan - I like them
"Le gustan" in Spanish means "he/she likes" or "they like." It is used to express that someone has a preference or enjoys something.
"Gustan los dulces" translates to "you like sweets" in English.
gustan is the plural for '' i like '' in spanish. the singular for i like in spanish is '' me gusta'' Save
oue Le Gustan los gatos? = spanish do you like cats? = English
A reflexive pronoun is needed here to define the sentence. Me, te, le, nos, os, les. Example: Me gustan los deportes is "I like sports".
you like history books
SPA: gustan las frutas The translation to English depends on the context: ENG: Do you the like fruits? ENG: Would you like fruit?
'le beurre' is 'the butter' in English.
Analyse: Me gustan las fresas (I like strawberries) A ti no te gustan los días de campo (You don't like picnics, informal singular context) 1. ¿Le / les gustan las rosas? (Do you like roses?, formal plural context) 2. ¿Le gustan las rosas? (Does he / she / it like roses?) / ¿Les gustan las rosas? (do they like roses?) No sé si os gustan estas frutas (I don't know if you like this fruit; informal plural context only in Spain) No nos gustan los problemas (We don't like to be in trouble)
a Ella le gustan las películas.
¿Le gustan los conciertos?