"Those who dare to fail miserably can achieve greatly." John F. Kennedy Kennedy's quote is conveying a message that failure is more of a positive than negative. Why? Also, what does he mean by "dare" to fail? Do you think Kennedy is correct about failure and achievement?

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Answer:

Answer in explanation

Explanation:

Kennedy is painting failure as more of positive than negative because, without trial, achievement cannot come to light.

So what he is trying to say if the more you fail at a particular endeavor, the better you are at doing it next time.

So he is saying with increased failure numbers, there is actually a nearness to success.

What he meant by dare to fail is that, people who actually attempt tasks may not get it the very first time, hence they may fail at the very first trial.

Yes, he is correct

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