first tell me y r u asking such a question...................
u ll neither succeed nor fail.......u ll waste ur time......in the end....hehe
2007-01-18 00:52:17
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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What do you mean, "you try to fail"? Say you have an exam. People will usually consider passing the test a "success" and not passing it a "failure". But if you try not to pass the test and pass it anyway, then you failed at achieving your aim. You cannot both succeed and fail at one and the same thing.
2007-01-18 08:53:44
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answer #2
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answered by sauwelios@yahoo.com 6
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I would say you both fail and succeed:
1. You FAIL to get what you want
and
2. You SUCCEED in failing to get what you want
2007-01-18 08:14:57
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answer #3
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answered by mahasaropama 2
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I think you like to play with the meaning of the words like me..;o]
anyway, your question has 2 dimensions...
the 1 dimension is the one you say ''succeed'' and that's because you didnot succeed in failure but you generally succeed.
the 2 dimension is the one you say ''failed'' and that's because you failed to rich your goal which was to fail..
it is all matter of subjective view in the end.....
i hope i helped, i like your smart question...
2007-01-18 09:28:54
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answer #4
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answered by bunny 2
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You succeeded in your supposed goal but failed your hidden one. This a bit like being a mole in a team or something, you failed to fail and didn't accomplish your secret goal, your hidden agenda.
2007-01-18 08:29:11
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answer #5
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answered by Mercenary Poet 2
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If you were purposely trying to fail, and succeeded anyway, I would have to say you failed. Mainly because you didn't put forth your best effort.
2007-01-18 08:15:31
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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failed
2007-01-18 09:53:44
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answer #7
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answered by Kelrec 4
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well technically you failed but you were successful at failing!
2007-01-18 08:12:28
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answer #8
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answered by rob 2
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