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"a bit of benefit" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It is usually used to describe something that has a positive effect or result, such as a positive outcome from a situation. For example: "The new policy was well received by the employees, and gave them a bit of benefit."
Exact(3)
"These are strong and fair measures to make sure British taxpayers don't subsidise people who want to do a bit of benefit tourism and come from one country to another just to get the better benefits system," he said.
While the devices are essentially the same – screen size and processor excepted – the Note 4 was speedy, bright, and very usable and the stylus adds a bit of benefit for those used to writing things down.
I said to you before I'd sooner have a short amount of time with a bit of bonus to it, a bit of benefit.
Similar(57)
In fact, the whole situation requires a bit of cost-benefit analysis: Verizon gives you 50 fewer megabytes of bandwidth, but retains their unlimited data plan, whereas AT&T saves you five dollars on its upper-tier plan (unless you go over 2 GB, in which case you pay $10 for another 2).
"There is a little bit of benefit of been around for a while, and my friends, I'll tell you right now, I've seen this movie before," McCain said, before harking back to the Gipper, and the military build-up Reagan carried out after he said U.S. forces had been "hollowed out" following the Vietnam War.
"It feels to me a lot like it did in the early 90s, where there's been a bit of redistribution of benefits and suddenly lone-parent families are that little bit worse off," she said.
There has been a horribly familiar change of atmosphere [since the 2010 election], it feels to me a lot like it did in the early 90s, where there's been a bit of redistribution of benefits and suddenly lone-parent families are that little bit worse off.
"We don't get a damn bit of benefit from electricity produced in the Dakotas," John Barry, author of Rising Tide: The Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 and How it Changed America, said recently.
"All they need is a little bit of benefit to overcome their fear and start hiring again".
Imagine if they all started saying "it CAN be done" and used just a bit of imagination...the benefits would be exponential.
But on the public official side, that creates a loophole big enough for a fire engine: a legislator-lawyer doesn't have to tell the rest of us when a bit of official business might benefit one of his or her unnamed clients.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com