beneficiar
give + Nombre + something for + Posesivo + money ; provide + benefit ; advantage.
Such a programme would be aimed at giving IFLA members something for their money, as well as attracting new members.
The project showed that microcomputers can provide significant benefits for processing.
When students were tested at the end of the course, those students taught using flexible learning techniques did not seem to have been either advantaged or disadvantaged by their use when compared with the students taught using conventional techniques.
beneficiarse
benefit
profit
be better off
be better served by
realise + benefits
There are a number of features of a catalogue or index which benefit from some standardisation.
In what respects can a student profit from a knowledge of abstracts and by developing abstracting skills?.
Everybody would be better off if academic libraries provided research services on a pay as you go basis.
However, librarians are better served by presuming any given alternativa title is geared for adult audiences, until proven otherwise = No obstante, es aconsejable que los bibliotecarios asuman que cualquier título alternativo va dirigido a un público adulto, hasta que no se demuestre lo contrario.
This situation will change through greater understanding of OSI standards and the benefits that can be realized through their use.
beneficiarse de
draw on/upon + fruits
enlist + the benefits of
be on the receiving end of
tap into
Each area will, nevertheless, draw upon the fruits of bibliographical scholarship in varying degrees.
There is now a possibility to enlist the benefits of exchange programmes through 'library twinning' arrangements.
Third world countries may not be on the receiving end of access because of lack of money or education.
It is clear that a powerful and mysterious force is pushing seniors toward greater volunteer involvement, and nonprofit groups should tap into this particularly civic age group before the Indian summer of volunteering reaches its end.
beneficiarse (de)
take + advantage (of)
It is not surprising that the networks discussed later have all taken advantage of computer processing in some form or another.
beneficiarse del triunfo ajeno
bask in + reflected glory
Instead of working hard to succeed, we always try to bask in reflected glory.
beneficiarse económicamente
line + Posesivo + (own) pocket(s)
A number of Antiquaries feared that it was all a plot hatched by 'a few designing members' to line their own pockets.
para beneficiarse económicamente
for profit
Most shoe merchants do their sincerest best for their customers considering our limited knowledge of foot health - others heartlessly use our lack of knowledge solely for profit.
poderbeneficiarse de
stand to + benefit from
stand to + gain from
Countries with lots of forest stand to benefit from the lucrative timber trade, but at what cost to their ecological footprint?.
We now go on to discuss what women librarians stand to gain from pursuing the main strategies feminists have developed to promote women's interests in working relations.
poderbeneficiarse de
stand to + benefit from
stand to + gain from
Countries with lots of forest stand to benefit from the lucrative timber trade, but at what cost to their ecological footprint?.
We now go on to discuss what women librarians stand to gain from pursuing the main strategies feminists have developed to promote women's interests in working relations.