advantageous
advantageous — 形容詞
1. putting you in a better position to succeed, win, or gain something useful — for
有利的
對某人或某事帶來好處或競爭優勢的
putting you in a better position to succeed, win, or gain something useful — for example, a tax rule that saves your company money, or a seat near the door during a job interview.
The new tax rules are highly advantageous to small family businesses in rural Taiwan.
新的稅務規定對台灣鄉村的小型家族企業非常有利。
advantageous to + [group] for who benefits
Mei found her fluent Japanese advantageous when she applied for a job at the Tokyo office.
美在應徵東京辦公室的工作時,發現流利的日文是一項有利條件。
find something advantageous when describing a useful asset
Signing the deal early would be advantageous for both companies before prices rise.
在價格上漲之前提早簽下這筆交易,對兩家公司都會比較有利。
The runners chose the inside lane because the shorter distance is clearly advantageous.
跑者選擇內側跑道,因為距離較短顯然較占優勢。
It is advantageous to book flights to Hokkaido at least three months before peak season.
在旺季前至少三個月訂北海道的機票會比較划算。
- beneficial
near-synonym; 'beneficial' often suggests long-term good (health, society), 'advantageous' suggests a competitive edge
- favorable
stresses that conditions help you; 'advantageous' stresses that you actively gain
- profitable
limited mostly to money and business; 'advantageous' covers any kind of gain
- helpful
everyday, informal alternative; weaker and broader
- disadvantageous
direct opposite, equally formal
- harmful
stronger — implies real damage, not just lost benefit
- unfavorable
describes conditions that work against you
文法句型
advantageous to/for someone
advantageous + to-infinitive
用法筆記
Frequently followed by 'to' or 'for' to mark who benefits. Common in formal contexts such as business, finance, law, and academic writing; in everyday speech, learners usually choose 'helpful', 'useful', or 'a big plus'.