Reap in a sentence as a verb

Those who adapt to the "new radio" first will reap the rewards.

Those who wish to reap the benefits Dart can opt-in and those who don't can ignore it.

So many lives lost and wars fought just to get us to where we are, and we reap the benefits.

This is what we all wanted, and now we can reap what we have sown, while the gentle glow of the chrome url box lights up our screen.

Think of it: That way you also reap full honor and appreciation for everything you do.

Uber will probably make their money back in a few dozen rides, then can simple reap the benefits.

Why not keep it open to the public, upgrade the access, and actually reap some positive PR from this?This is the kind of stuff protesters hate about rich techies.

"Short of a directive from Larry and Sergey and the willingness to follow through for the 3-5 years it took Amazon to reap dividends, is there anything Google can do?

Not in Silicon Valley, where the fog burns off by noon and it’s an article of faith that talented, hard-working techies can change the world and reap unimaginable wealth in the process.

The init system runs as PID 1 and strictly speaking, the sole responsibility is to daemonize, reap its children, set the session and process group IDs, and optionally exec the process manager.

If there are no restrictions on its usage, this hope becomes futile -- the gatekeepers of privately owned datasets will reap the benefits of contributions to OSM without offering anything in return.

Right now, every other country essentially gets the US to pay the bill for the innovation and they reap the benefits at a lower cost, but with US healthcare already consuming 1/6 of our economy, this isn't sustainable.

Reap definitions

verb

gather, as of natural products; "harvest the grapes"

See also: harvest glean

verb

get or derive; "He drew great benefits from his membership in the association"

See also: draw