[Vocabulary] precede VS entail

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rkatk

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I have been confused about the usages of two words, such as Entail and Accompany


What I am trying to say is " Failure precedes success. "


Among the three sentences below, which ones do have the same meaning as above?


1 Success entails failure

2 Failure entails success

3 Success is accompanied by failure

4 failure is accompanied by success
 
None of those are right. To reverse the order, you can use the verb follows:

Success follows failure.

However, Failure precedes success is the best way to say what you mean. You don't need to say it in any other way.
 
You got the meaning of entail wrong. Success entails hard work would make sense.
 
Last edited:
Perhaps:

Many failed attempts often precede a successful one.

I don't recall the number, but Edison tried many times before he attained success with the invention of the light bulb.
 
I have been confused about the usages of two words, [STRIKE]such as[/STRIKE] "entail" and "accompany".
- Note the punctuation.
- Do not unnecessarily capitalize ordinary nouns.
- Look words up in the dictionary to see how they are typically used. www.onelook.com

What I am trying to say is "Failure precedes success".
[STRIKE] Among[/STRIKE] Out of the three sentences below, which ones [STRIKE]do[/STRIKE] have the same meaning as above?
1 Success entails failure.
2 Failure entails success.
3 Success is accompanied by failure.
4 Failure is accompanied by success.
Note the above corrections.
 
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