Mate logo
Home
Apps
MacMac + SafariiOSiPhone + iPadChromeGoogle ChromeFirefoxMozilla FirefoxOperaOperaEdgeMicrosoft Edge
BlogHelp CenterContact
Apps

iPhone + iPad

Help Center, release notes, Download

Mac + Safari

Help Center, release notes, Download

Google Chrome

Help Center, Download

Mozilla Firefox

Help Center, Download

Opera

Help Center, Download

Microsoft Edge

Help Center, Download
Support
DownloadHelp CenterSupported languagesRequest a refundRestore passwordRestore serial codesPrivacy policy
STAY IN TOUCH
ContactTwitterBlog
Site language
free services
Web translatorVerb conjugatorDer Die Das lookupUsage examplesWordsDefinitionIdioms
Mate logo
Home
Apps
MacMac + SafariiOSiPhone + iPadChromeGoogle ChromeFirefoxMozilla FirefoxOperaOperaEdgeMicrosoft Edge
BlogHelp CenterContact
Apps

iPhone + iPad

Help Center, release notes, Download

Mac + Safari

Help Center, release notes, Download

Google Chrome

Help Center, Download

Mozilla Firefox

Help Center, Download

Opera

Help Center, Download

Microsoft Edge

Help Center, Download
Support
DownloadHelp CenterSupported languagesRequest a refundRestore passwordRestore serial codesPrivacy policy
STAY IN TOUCH
ContactTwitterBlog
Site language
free services
Web translatorVerb conjugatorDer Die Das lookupUsage examplesWordsDefinitionIdioms

Definition of "beneficient" in English

adjective

  1. (sometimes proscribed) beneficent

    • 1929, Time, 25 March, 1929, "Apple Salt," https://web.archive.org/web/20130721133038/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,846362,00.html Last week. Dr. John Christian Krantz Jr., chemist and pharmacist at Johns Hopkins, announced that that laboratory of many a beneficient drug had created a salt substitute, which has proved palatable during a year's tests.
    • 1981, Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o, Writers in Politics: Essays, London: Heinemann, Part 1, Chapter 3, p. 47, And not the least, they smashed the racialist view of peasants as uncultured recipients of cultures from beneficient foreigners.