: Use "le" to represent the person being pleased (him, her, it, or you-formal).
: Use "gusta" if the thing being liked is singular or an action (verb). Use "gustan" if the things being liked are plural. Common "Pitfalls" (For your review) le_gusta_too
The verb gustar doesn't mean "to like" in the way English speakers think. It actually means : Use "le" to represent the person being
: Indirect Object Pronoun + Verb ( gusta/gustan ) + Subject not the person.
: Learners often try to match "gusta" to the person (e.g., thinking "they like" should be les gustan ). Remember: the verb matches the object , not the person.