Beneficiary in a sentence as a noun

Khosla -- by virtue of the effect of the restriction on the market price of the land -- would be a beneficiary of the taking, not a victim.

The whole financial system and everybody that depends on it was a beneficiary of the bailouts.

I strongly disagree that the average tech worker is on the "beneficiary side" of the inequality gap.

While most might think such an agreement would benefit Mark, the real beneficiary are Facebook shareholders if splitting up required selling shares to split proceeds.

Monsanto is not the only beneficiary of their evil ways, though: because of their evilness, millions of Americans spend less on food than they otherwise would.

You know what type of fund is a major beneficiary of raising money from banks and large financial institutions by fulfilling the alternative asset type category?

Beneficiary in a sentence as an adjective

With comparatively few exceptions, mainly of other large concerns in California, the Standard has been the sole beneficiary of such discriminations.

"This quote explains what's happening:"These payments to the EFF are being made in suits the EFF played no role in bringing, and the defendants themselves -- Google and Facebook, in these instances -- helped select EFF to be their beneficiary.

The tax break is for companies over a certain size who lease space for a minimum of 5 years; Twitter would be one beneficiary, but behind them is SF property management company Shorenstein, who has much more to gain/lose depending on the outcome.

Tech workers are definitely on the beneficiary side of the inequality gap, so I don't see how these conspiracies to indirectly keep tech workers salaries down to 2x to 5x of median American household income is really germane.

Wasn't their original intent to protect the inventor's R&D investment by ensuring that he would be the sole beneficiary of the invention for a time?Easily reverse-engineering products makes the initial purpose even more necessary.

Beneficiary definitions

noun

the recipient of funds or other benefits

See also: donee

noun

the semantic role of the intended recipient who benefits from the happening denoted by the verb in the clause

adjective

having or arising from a benefice; "a beneficiary baron"