1. benefit
The advantage gained from something. the benefit of eating vegetables is that you are healthier. 2: benefit of the doubt. Choosing to believe someone despite their story or claims being likely to be untrue.
I got it through my head that my parent's strict rules were for my own benefit.
unemployment benefit
I have often observed how little young ladies are interested by books of a serious stamp, though written solely for their benefit. It amazes me, I confess; for, certainly, there can be nothing so advantageous to them as instruction.
Human society is a function of all humanity, those who profit most from it should pay the most for the benefit they gain, of course being greedy, they just want more.
The life lesson: giving people the benefit of the doubt can further your career and personal relationships!
I have one of my friends who graduated from university and became a fine public servant. Once he told me that what he had learned from school had been useless. However, what little philosophy he had learned proved to be of great benefit.
Students, when you want to say something, think about it three times before you say it. Speak only if your words will benefit yourselves and others. Do not speak if it brings no benefit.
Some people do not have a consistent set of principles; they just adopt whatever principles benefit them at the moment.
They claim that cigarettes have many psychological benefits, for example they calm them down and make them feel better.
How have people benefited from the fact that medicine has advanced so much in the last years?
Although government and military agencies were among the first to explore drones for their warfare capabilities, these winged devices are now also marketed to kids,(...), and just about anyone who can benefit from a viewpoint in the skies around them.
Visa liberalisation is intended to benefit the people of these countries, not to reward their politicians.
to be on benefit(s) / salary £20,000 plus benefits
Anglais mot "korzystać"(benefit) se produit dans des ensembles:
Speakout Intermediate Unit 1 DominikaUnit 5- Grammer, ListeningUnit 5 Off to work pt.1FOCUS 4 UNIT 5 Off toi workkartkówkaz tekstu2. use
He compiled a Japanese folklore anthology for use in schools.
I use Firefox.
Even though computer programmers may use semicolons every day, nowadays most people only use semicolons for emoticons.
In all likelihood, you will pass the entrance exam if you use this textbook.
Time is a precious thing, so we should make the best use of it.
Recently there are a lot of young people who don't use respectful language to their superiors.
At the age of six he had learned to use the typewriter and told the teacher that he did not need to learn to write by hand.
If it's badly insulated, it won't warm up regardless of how much heating you use.
That knife was so blunt I couldn't use it to cut the meat so I had to rely on my pocket knife.
In the end, because of the disease, he became unable to walk and had to use a motorized wheelchair to get around.
The USSR will only use air strikes in the country as a last resort.
It is illegal in the United States for law enforcement to use torture to get information.
I used to use Twitter, but then found it a bit boring, so I stopped using it.
Instead of using disposable chopsticks, it's better to use plastic chopsticks that you can wash.
Even at the end of the nineteenth century, sailors in the British Navy were not permitted to use knives and forks because using them was considered a sign of weakness.
Anglais mot "korzystać"(use) se produit dans des ensembles:
vocab moduł 6 New Hot Spot 4Polish verbsangielski słowka3. take advantage of
take advantage of the opportunity
We will also need to take advantage of any opportunities for redeployment and transfer
You take advantage of the hotel facilities
If we fail to take advantage of this chance, people on both sides will be disillusioned.
She’s very generous and trusting so some people take advantage of her.
It is worth taking advantage of the promotion. I never meant to take advantage of you.
children offten take advantage of me
Anglais mot "korzystać"(take advantage of) se produit dans des ensembles:
idiomy angielskie4. embrace
embrace globalization
Head spinning, lungs screaming, she ran into its embrace.
If you embrace someone, you put your arms around them...
But when we push aside normal emotions to embrace false positivity...
You must embrace him for me, Holy Father.
I need an embrace. He embraced the socialist ideology with enthusiasm.
This is a difficult responsibility to embrace. For human history has often been a record of nations and tribes subjugating one another to serve their own interests. Yet in this new age, such attitudes are self-defeating.
He was doubtful at first but soon came to embrace my advice.
Embrace your vulnerability, feel your fear, love fully.
Why do women want to sleep in a man's embrace?
Perhaps you will be surprised but my only desire in this life is to see my son and give him a loving embrace before I die.
I think that our culture is a bit crazy not to embrace it,
Right, so she wants us to embrace – to accept – the idea of a workplace power-nap.
I think that our culture is a bit crazy not to embrace it, and one of the reasons we don't is our attitude, you know it's quite counter-cultural to do nothing in order to get ahead.
People need to be aware of their differences, but also embrace their commonness.
Anglais mot "korzystać"(embrace) se produit dans des ensembles:
Unit 1 Reading pp 16-17_Part 15. interact
One way to learn a foreign language is to interact with native speakers of that language.
At school, teachers say he interacted well with other people
Penny is a bit shy but she interacts well with the children in her class.
To act on each other: "More than a dozen variable factors could interact, with their permutations running into the thousands"
You can interact with the TV using the remote control.
You stand up and walk through it; and the cast interacts with you.
interact with
All people are born free and have the same rights and dignity. They are imbued with reason and conscience and should interact with each other in a spirit of brotherhood.
Basing his invention of public relations on his uncle Sigmund Freud's psychoanalytic theory, Edward Bernays has left a lasting legacy on the media and how they interact with their audiences.
6. exercise
Don't just read books. Go outside once in a while and get some exercise.
The reason Tom is fat is because he eats too much and doesn't get enough exercise.
We exercise.
Please exercise every caution against cowboy salesmen of water purifiers and fraudulent-test sales.
That exercise - backs together, link arms, one bends forwards while the other stretches their back - we did that a lot as children, didn't we?
In Japan, due partly to the fitness boom that began from around 2000, 'dumbbell training' also appeared as a way to exercise at home.
Great men are almost always bad men, even when they exercise influence and not authority.
Belinda tried strict diets, grueling exercise routines, and some sort of esoteric New Age detox, all amounting to nothing--she had curves, and that was that.
Advocates of capitalism are very apt to appeal to the sacred principles of liberty, which are embodied in one maxim: The fortunate must not be restrained in the exercise of tyranny over the unfortunate.
After business came to a halt, many bathhouses added new facilities, such as saunas and exercise equipment, in an effort to attract customers.
Swimming is my favourite form of exercise. Let's do some stretching exercises to start with.
My time for these exercise and reading was at night, after work or before it began in the morning, or on Sundays.
As for physical exercise, although I loathe most sports (I think they're really boring), I do like going to the gym to lift weights.
At this time of day, most customers are adults here to exercise, there aren't that many kids.
Anglais mot "korzystać"(exercise) se produit dans des ensembles:
pięć rozszerzoneMacmillan dział 5