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23 Sentences With "reaped the benefit"

How to use reaped the benefit in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "reaped the benefit" and check conjugation/comparative form for "reaped the benefit". Mastering all the usages of "reaped the benefit" from sentence examples published by news publications.

In Iraq and Syria, ISIS did the destabilizing and Iran reaped the benefit.
Brazil's farm sector, meanwhile, has reaped the benefit of China's feud with Trump.
Even other social networks, like Facebook, reaped the benefit of news breaking on Twitter.
"Like Apple computers or Goodyear tires, I reaped the benefit of cheap Chinese labor," she writes.
"Shoppers reaped the benefit of falling prices this Christmas, with groceries 1.83 percent cheaper than last year," Fraser McKevitt said.
Local mining stocks have reaped the benefit, with Rio Tinto having gained over 36% this year and 2.2% for the day.
Instead, he is generally regarded as one of the nation's most successful chief justices, because the country reaped the benefit of his leadership experience.
Accenture reported a 7.4 percent rise in quarterly revenue on Thursday, as it reaped the benefit of its investments in digital and cloud services.
Journalists have reaped the benefit of constant leaks coming out of the White House and the administration—dozens of sources, damning disclosures, colorful quotes.
"Pepsi has reaped the benefit of not only having a Super Bowl commercial, but for sponsoring the halftime show, too," said Kellan Terry of Brandwatch.
While the national government largely footed the bill and households largely reaped the benefit, it's important to remember that the money government spends is funded by taxpayers.
Like, I'm sorry — and it's not you in particular, but you all — sometimes it feels like you have all reaped the benefit, but not the responsibility of having a platform, you know what I mean?
As we celebrate the 25-year anniversary of SPY and the advent of ETFs, it is clear that investors, advisors, traders, market participants and exchanges have all reaped the benefit of these new passive products.
Having reaped the benefit of that historic progress, would it really be fair to now ignore our own responsibility in the use of fossil fuels and place the blame for global warming on those who supplied what we demanded?
As a result, Odey, who runs hedge fund Odey Asset Management, said he is now positioning for the pound to strengthen after his flagship fund previously reaped the benefit of betting against UK assets amid wider market fears about the impact of Brexit.
Although Europe's Airbus has not reaped the benefit some had predicted from the standoff - with its own direct sale of jets to China blocked for almost a year - finance sources say China-linked firms have generally been keeping a low profile in order not to be caught on the wrong side of the shifting dispute.
SISCOM's claimed that Eagle's LinkedIn connections belonged to the company, that Eagle stole the connections and subsequently reaped the benefit of the time and efforts it put into maintaining her LinkedIn account.
Having entered Lincoln's Inn, he was called to the bar in May 1840. A conveyancer and equity draftsman, Wickens had a practice that reaped the benefit when in 1852 a number of leading juniors took silk. He appeared frequently before the House of Lords and the privy council. During the later years of his career as barrister he was equity counsel to the treasury; he was never Q.C. nor a parliamentary candidate.
The resistance organized by the republicans within Paris under Victor Hugo was soon subdued by the intoxicated soldiers. The more serious resistance in the départements was crushed by declaring a state of siege and by the "mixed commissions." The plebiscite of 20 December, ratified by a huge majority the coup d'état in favour of the prince-president, who alone reaped the benefit of the excesses of the Republicans and the reactionary passions of the monarchists.
By 1961, when the railway closed, the population had dropped to 863, shops were beginning to struggle and close and although local people could still depend on the mill for jobs, wages were not keeping pace with inflation. Ballantyne's amalgamated into Scottish Worsteds & Woollens in 1968 and then in 1980, the remaining mill was bought by Dawson International. At first Walkerburn reaped the benefit of mill closures elsewhere in the Borders but in 1988 Dawson pulled out and the last mill closed. That was the end of Walkerburn as a mill village.
The Custom of Paris turned the family into a body corporate that usually co-owned property. That arrangement contributed to egalitarian family structures and a preoccupation with "fairness" in family matters in New France. While technically property was divided into separate property and community property upon solemnizing of the marriage, early settlers often had no separate property, or brought plots of land that were virtually worthless into their marriages and reaped the benefit of such land only after years of combined labour. Thus, in practice, much separate property was incorporated into the marital community to avoid future disputes about added values and so forth.
His was the arduous task of putting the broken shreds of the old historic diocese together. His first care was to reform the diocesan seminary, and in order to have an efficient body of European priests with their heart in their work, he brought out a number of young boys from Portugal and gave them a collegiate course in English, in the college to which he had raised the existing high- school, previous to their entering upon their ecclesiastical course of studies. His successors reaped the benefit of his policy. He opened a convent of European nuns at Saint Thomas, and another of Indian nuns in Mylapur, which have since thrown out branches into various parts of the diocese.
Arthur had a better reputation than Murphy, but reformers still criticized the patronage structure and the moiety system as corrupt. A rising tide of reform within the party caused Arthur to rename the financial extractions from employees as "voluntary contributions" in 1872, but the concept remained, and the party reaped the benefit of controlling government jobs. In that year, reform-minded Republicans formed the Liberal Republican party and voted against Grant, but he was re-elected in spite of their opposition. Nevertheless, the movement for civil service reform continued to chip away at Conkling's patronage machine; in 1874 Custom House employees were found to have improperly assessed fines against an importing company as a way to increase their own incomes, and Congress reacted, repealing the moiety system and putting the staff, including Arthur, on regular salaries.

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