Beneficent in a sentence as an adjective

Why anyone thinks FB is beneficent is beyond me.

Being smart is only a small part of being a wise, beneficent and effective leader or doing what is best for one's country.

Girl Talk's been using an even more beneficent form of this model since day one, which means far before getting popular.

The request for donations certainly makes it seem like they are beneficent, but they are themselves selling the data.

Unions are necessarily devised and lead by workers, not beneficent corps.

While I mostly agree - that surveillance drone technology could and will probably be used over again for beneficent purposes as well.

The singularity isn't going to save us any more then beneficent aliens will solve my problems by taking me on their ship to the planet of the sex goddesses to live in bliss in their zoo.

But to say that some wise and beneficent scholars recognized this fact implies there were prototype longitudinal surveys coupled with an ancient germ-theory of disease.

Maybe they were relatively beneficent because of the American political culture they internalized, but at the end of the day the nation was always at their mercy.

[1] I think this is a valid point, and you should take this kind of action into account when judging these market participants; their motives may not be beneficent, but they are still fulfilling a necessary task.

No doubt there have been plenty of beneficent individuals, but the beneficent treatment of fellow humans is sadly often the exception historically speaking.

The idea that there are certain standards of morality and humanity that all beneficent bodies must observe is something that loosely falls within the realm of "natural rights", ie those rights that have not been bestowed by human law.

But a smart recruiter would realize that some measurable chunk of endorsements are selected by people who have no clue as to your skill set or level of ability in that particular area -- people who, for example, logged in, saw four possible endorsements they could give people in their network at the top of their screen, were feeling beneficent that day, and clicked on all of them.

"THE Conventions of a number of the States having at the time of their adopting the Constitution, expressed a desire, in order to prevent misconstruction or abuse of its powers, that further declaratory and restrictive clauses should be added: And as extending the ground of public confidence in the Government, will best insure the beneficent ends of its institution"In other words, the Bill of Rights was enacted "in order to prevent misconstruction or abuse of its powers".

Beneficent definitions

adjective

doing or producing good; "the most beneficent regime in history"

adjective

generous in assistance to the poor; "a benevolent contributor"; "eleemosynary relief"; "philanthropic contributions"

See also: benevolent eleemosynary philanthropic