For the small partners who take part in the postgraduate entrance examination, the initial test has no effect, the research and recruitment office will not investigate you, and there is no such restriction on registering for the exam. Therefore, the initial test should be carefully prepared. If the initial test results are particularly good, everything will not be a problem, and the impact of failing a subject will not be great.
However, in the second interview, college failure will have more or less influence:
First of all, if it's your first time to try the line, it won't affect your re-examination.
Secondly, when re-testing, we should provide the undergraduate results to the institutions that apply for the exam. Although most schools don't care about this, if you apply for a particularly good school, they will also refer to it. The tutor may ask this question during the second interview, but this is not the main factor. As long as you are good enough to be appreciated by the teacher, it is not a problem and the teacher will not mind.
Finally, failing the course will affect graduation. Universities have a credit system. If you can't graduate because of insufficient credits, there is nothing to say.
In short, it is relative whether failing a course has an impact. Every teacher who recruits graduate students is not stupid and always wants to recruit excellent students. The comprehensive situation of each student will always be comprehensively compared. Basically, being able to enter the re-examination shows that the professional basic science is not bad, so I basically ignored it if I failed the exam.