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Beneficent   /bˌɛnəfˈɪʃənt/   Listen
Beneficent

adjective
1.
Doing or producing good.  Antonym: maleficent.
2.
Generous in assistance to the poor.  Synonyms: benevolent, eleemosynary, philanthropic.  "Eleemosynary relief" , "Philanthropic contributions"






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Beneficent" Quotes from Famous Books



... expected our Madelon would trouble herself. Without other thought than that here might be another and sure way of furthering her one object, she made her way into a church, and expending two sous in a lighted taper, carried it to a little side chapel, where, above a flower-decorated altar, a beneficent Madonna seemed to welcome all sad orphans in the ...
— My Little Lady • Eleanor Frances Poynter

... and all the animal kingdom, in common with trees and plants, derive health and vigor therefrom. This glorious natural light leaves our best gas, electricity, oil lamp, and all our multiplicity of candles, immeasurably behind. But although we cannot hope to equal, in all its beneficent results, the effects of daylight, or to perfectly replace it, we can more perfectly make the lighting of our homes comfortable (and as little destructive to the eyes and to the general health) by the aid of ...
— Scientific American Supplement, No. 514, November 7, 1885 • Various

... in the old gentleman's tea, when, mirabile dictu, Mr. Blandy, who at breakfast had been very cross, appeared at dinner in the best of humours, and continued so "all the time Mr. Cranstoun stayed with him"! After this, who could doubt the beneficent efficacy of the wise ...
— Trial of Mary Blandy • William Roughead

... his work only half done; yet that half was permanent, and its beneficent mark may be seen on the English law and the English constitution ...
— The Leading Facts of English History • D.H. Montgomery

... earth than that of the Christian ministry, and that calling is one which concerns itself first and chiefly with the conversion of sinners and the edifying of saints. This work is so awful in its importance, and so beneficent in its results, that it must take the chief place in a minister's thoughts and in the disposition of his time; and if it requires the sole place, that too must be accorded to it. "To me," wrote Cairns to George Gilfillan in 1849, "love seems infinitely higher than knowledge ...
— Principal Cairns • John Cairns


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