different between beneficial vs beneficialness
beneficial
English
Etymology
From Late Latin benefici?lis (“beneficial”), from Latin beneficium (“benefit, favor, kindness”).
Pronunciation
- enPR: b?n?f?sh'?l, IPA(key): /?b?n??f???l/
Adjective
beneficial (comparative more beneficial, superlative most beneficial)
- Helpful or good to something or someone.
- Relating to a benefice.
Synonyms
- (helpful or good): advantageous, behooveful (archaic), helpful, useful
- (relating to a benefice): usufructuary, usufructuous
Antonyms
- maleficial, nocuous, damaging, harmful (doing harm to someone)
- innocuous, undamaging, harmless (doing no harm; doing neither harm nor good)
Derived terms
- beneficialness
- beneficial owner
Translations
Noun
beneficial (plural beneficials)
- Something that is beneficial.
beneficial From the web:
- what beneficial means
- what beneficial insects eat whiteflies
- what beneficial bacteria are in sauerkraut
- what beneficial mooc to an individual
- what beneficial insects eat aphids
- what's beneficial
- helpful or beneficial
beneficialness
English
Etymology
beneficial +? -ness
Noun
beneficialness (uncountable)
- The state or quality of being beneficial.
beneficialness From the web:
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- beneficial vs beneficialness
- bogwoods vs logwoods
- bogwoods vs boxwoods
- cornbeefwood vs beefwood
- belah vs beefwood
- timber vs beefwood
- tree vs beefwood
- beefwood vs beef
- terms vs hornbeak
- martini vs gibson
- fender vs gibson
- gibsonian vs gibson
- gibsonesque vs gibson
- vermouth vs gibson
- gin vs gibson
- cocktail vs gibson
- gibb vs gibbs
- surname vs gibbs
- patronymic vs gibbs
- ferule vs ferulae