benefitted or benefited - WordReference Forums I vote for "benefitted", usually use "travelled" and would never write "worshiped" These are words that exhibit more variation than say, the stricter AmE BrE spelling distinctions of color colour or center centre
benefit from or by - WordReference Forums I think either is acceptable in your sentence I would say that "by" indicates that careful reading of X is the method by which historians will gain benefit (it does not say what the benefit is, explicitly); and "from" indicates that such reading is the source of their benefit
people would benefit vs people would be benefited Hi all, the following sentence comes from a passage written by a non-native English teacher: If Seoul were to become the cultural hub of Asia, it would be great news for the territory as many people would be benefited I've been taught that "benefit" is used in the active sense regardless of
Benefitted or what? - WordReference Forums However, usually unstressed T is not doubled in such verbs: most people write 'benefited', not 'benefitted' The double TT is a rare spelling variant Likewise with S: most people write 'focused', not 'focussed', but the SS spelling also exists
be benefited (passive) - WordReference Forums Hi all, can the verb "benefit" be used in the passive? For example: Everyone will be benefited if the government spends more money on education or: Everyone will be benefited from the increased money spent on education I rarely see "benefit" used in the passive so I was wondering :)
to benefit off of something | WordReference Forums Is it correct to say “to benefit off of something”? Here is an example sentence: He is cheating at the game so he can benefit off of the extra points Or should it be: He is cheating at the game so he can benefit from the extra points If both are acceptable, what is different between “off
someones benefit from or of getting information? Hi, In the following sentence, which is the correct preposition out of the two in bold? "Evaluators could simply be making a trade-off by weighing the friend’s benefit from of getting the information according to his preceding grade: the higher the grade, the less he would benefit from the
benefited from - WordReference Forums Hi Laztana, Like the others, I'm on your side, but even your sentence feels a bit odd to me I think the point is that people, or, at least living things, usually benefit from something, and even a sentence like the car benefited from a tankful of petrol sounds a little strange because of the implied personification
we will have benefited have benefitted - WordReference Forums hello, folks What is the difference between 1 and 2 1-Our boss hopes that we will have benefited from the training course( from now on ) 2-Our boss hopes that we have benefited from the training course (already benefited ) Thanks in advance