Not necessarily.
No, it will not be hard.
no
Of course not. Certainly, you won't be bad at physics or engineering BECAUSE OF your math skills. You NEED math for physics, and both math and physics for engineering, so somebody who is not good at math is more likely to have trouble with physics or engineering.
You HAVE to be good at mathematics to be good at chemistry, physics and engineering. It's not a handicap, it's a necessity.
It is not bad to be good at mathematics. It is specifically good.
No.
No, it is not true. It is false. In order to PASS physics, chemistry, and engineering, you must be pretty good at mathematics.
No.
No, you will fail those subject that you do not study for. Passing or failing is in your hands not "fate".
The statement seems absurd to me.
K. A. Stroud has written: 'Engineering Mathematics' 'Engineering mathematics' -- subject(s): Engineering mathematics, Programmed instruction, Problems, exercises 'Differential equations' -- subject(s): Differential equations, Problems, exercises, Laplace transformation 'STROUD:ENGINEERING MATHEMATICS' 'Advanced engineering mathematics' -- subject(s): Programmed instruction, Engineering mathematics 'Further engineering mathematics' -- subject(s): Programmed instruction, Engineering mathematics 'Essential mathematics for science and technology' -- subject(s): Mathematics