Legacy is a past tense word. Learn to read. You only screwed yourself over. Even the weekly update said that it was for people trying to complete their year one collection
English
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Ha someone doesn't know how to read
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-tells OP to learn to read -doesn't read post -facepalm
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I could've had a v8 but yes I didn't thoroughly read the post I read the first paragraph it's a trap for trolls. I understand now
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I almost fell for it myself
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[quote]Legacy is a past tense word. [b]Learn to read[/b]. You only screwed yourself over. Even the weekly update said that it was for people trying to complete their year one collection[/quote]
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Legacy isn't past tense. In fact, legacy [i]can't[/i] be past tense, it's not a verb.
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A legacy is someone's history...someone's legend. So therefore in all cases it will be used as past tense. History is the past. if I'm wrong please correct me sir
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I'm not trying to be a dick, but you are wrong. The past tense is used for verbs to show the object did something in the past, as opposed to doing it now, or going to do it in the future. You can have a legacy, but you don't legacy, so it be put in past tense. Then it'd be "I legacied", and that's not a thing. [spoiler]Source - I have a degree in technical writing.[/spoiler]
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Someone's legacy is their past and history. "anything handed down from the past, as from an ancestor or predecessor:" quoted from dictionary.com. so yes I'm right..
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Ahaha you're wrong man, something can only be in past tense if it's a verb- legacy is a noun. Legacy can [b]refer[/b] to the past but it is [i]not[/i] past tense
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You learn to read :D.