different between beneficial vs healthful

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)

  1. Helpful or good to something or someone.
  2. 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)

  1. 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


healthful

English

Alternative forms

  • healthfull (archaic)

Etymology

From Middle English helthful, helþful, helþeful, equivalent to health +? -ful.

Adjective

healthful (comparative healthfuller or more healthful, superlative healthfullest or most healthful)

  1. Beneficial to bodily health.
    • 1906, Princeton Alumni Weekly (volume 7, page 210)
      Hockey is an exciting and healthful form of exercise, well suited to college students []
  2. Conducive to moral or spiritual prosperity; salutary.
    • 1926, Ernest Hemingway, The Sun Also Rises, Folio Society 2008, p. 30:
      As he had been thinking for months about leaving his wife and had not done it because it would be too cruel to deprive her of himself, her departure was a very healthful shock.

Synonyms

  • healthy
  • salubrious
  • salutary
  • wholesome

Usage notes

When a clearer distinction is intended, healthy is used to describe the state of the object, and healthful describes its ability to impart health to the recipient. Vegetables in good condition are both healthy (i.e., not rotten or diseased) and healthful (i.e., they improve the eaters' health, compared to eating junk food). By contrast, a poisonous plant can be healthy, but it is not healthful to eat of.

Derived terms

  • healthfully
  • healthfulness

Related terms

  • heal
  • health
  • healthy

Translations

healthful From the web:

  • what healthy foods to eat
  • what healthy gums look like
  • what healthy poop looks like
  • what healthy snacks can i eat
  • what healthy food should i eat
  • what healthy foods are high in calories
  • what healthy foods give you energy
  • what healthy nails look like
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