A fork of Rural Dictionary
A Spanish Word,Details are following: 1.- You can't say me gusto, well, you actually can, but it would mean "I like myself". 2.- Me gustà (with the orthograpic accent at the end) it's past tense, it means "I liked it" it can also mean "I liked him/her", it depends on the context. 3.- Me gusta is present tense "I like it" or "I like him/her". Not everything in spanish that ends with O is masculine and A femenine. GustÃ, gusto and gusta are part of the same verb: Gustar (infinitive), In spanish, verbs do not change acording to male or female. Hope this is not too extensive and it actually helps you out Source(s): Native spanish speaker Me Gusto Me Gusta Me GustÃ
Me Gusto Queso is very wrong. But Still, Me Gusto, cause I'm so pretty. Me GustÃ.....but now she's gone. The Queso....Me Gusta!
A Spanish phrase that literally translates into "I please myself." Gringos mistakenly think it means "I like that".
Gringo: Me gusto! Spaniard: Estas un gringo.