cosechar
reap ; harvest.
Women suffragists reaped an unexpected publicity bonanza when the 1913 national suffrage parade in Washington was broken up by a drunken mob.
Entire families or groups of families cooperate in growing and harvesting food.
cosechar beneficios
reap + benefits
reap + returns
reap + rewards
harvest + rewards
A library which opts to join a network may reap the benefit of advantages in terms of: efficiency, productivity, currency, control, costs.
These new consortial arrangements are based upon a spirit of cooperation and trust that has the potential to reap returns well beyond the initial aspirations of the participants.
The first countries to enter the information society will reap the greatests rewards whereas countries which temporise or favour half-hearted solutions could, in less than a decade, face disastrous declines in investment and a squeeze on jobs.
The internet has given the ability to attract a never-ending number of potential clients, and by setting up solid business practices you can harvest the rewards.
cosechas lo que siembras [Derivado de la expresión original "Curses, like chickens, come home to roost"]
you reap what you sow
the chickens come home to roost
what goes around comes around
if you dance, you must pay the piper
as you sow, so shall you reap
you shall reap what you sow
A popular teaching of the New Testament is the principle that 'you reap what you sow'.
These particular chickens do come home to roost.
If there's one place where what goes around comes around, it's the United States Senate.
And as the old saying goes: 'If you dance, you must pay the piper' .
The article 'as you sow, so shall you reap: understanding the value of information' addresses the common problem of how to establish the value of the library and the information it provides in the eyes of the parent organisation.
It is that you shall reap what you sow and that you cannot reap if you do not sow..