Me gusta el vestido antiguo de mi tía.

Breakdown of Me gusta el vestido antiguo de mi tía.

yo
I
gustar
to like
mi
my
el vestido
the dress
antiguo
antique
de
of
la tía
the aunt
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Questions & Answers about Me gusta el vestido antiguo de mi tía.

Why does the sentence use Me gusta instead of something like Yo gusto?
In Spanish, gustar works differently from the English verb "to like." It literally means "to be pleasing to someone." So Me gusta translates to "It pleases me." That is why it's not Yo gusto (which would mean "I please") or Me gusto (which would mean "I please myself").
Why is it el vestido (masculine article) when talking about a dress, which might seem feminine in English?
Gender in Spanish is a grammatical feature and not always related to the actual object being masculine or feminine in real life. The word vestido is masculine, so you must use the masculine article el.
Why do we say antiguo after vestido here, instead of antiguo vestido?
In Spanish, adjectives can go before or after the noun, but the meaning can change slightly. El vestido antiguo usually means "the old/antique dress." If you said el antiguo vestido, it could sometimes imply something like "the former dress" rather than its age or antique style. Here, placing antiguo after the noun emphasizes that the dress itself is old or antique.
Why do we use de mi tía to say "my aunt’s" dress instead of something like mi tía's vestido in English?
In Spanish, possession is commonly expressed using de (of) plus the possessor. The literal structure is "the antique dress of my aunt," which is how you convey "'s" in English. So "de mi tía" means "of my aunt" and works as the possessive.
Does Me gusta always stay the same, even if I’m talking about something plural?
Not necessarily. If the thing you like is plural, you change gusta to gustan. For example, you would say Me gustan los vestidos antiguos de mi tía ("I like my aunt’s antique dresses"). But the pronoun me doesn't change; only the verb form changes to agree with the subject (the dresses).

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