benefits
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
benefit/ˈbenɪfɪt/
▶noun
- 1 an advantage or profit gained from something.
- 2 a payment made by the state or an insurance scheme to someone entitled to receive it, e.g. an unemployed person.
- 3 a public performance designed to raise money for a charity.
■ bring advantage to.
– phrases
benefit of clergy
benefit of clergy
- 1 exemption of the English clergy and nuns from the jurisdiction of the ordinary civil courts (abolished in 1827).
- 2 ecclesiastical sanction or approval.
– origin ME: from OFr. bienfet, from L. benefactum ‘good deed’, from bene facere ‘do good (to)’.
'benefits' also found in these Oxford entries:
altruism
- benefit
- capitalize
- commensal
- cooperative
- cost–benefit
- de-index
- deprivation
- free
- friendly society
- golden handcuffs
- jobcentre
- marginal
- parasite
- penny
- poverty trap
- social security
- tough love
- welfare state
- win-win
- workfare
- world

