0 to have a result that is an advantage to someone: --
A good relationship with one's colleagues redounds to everyone's benefit.
It will redound not to the public benefit but to private profit.
I am confident that it will eventually come to great success and redound immensely to the credit of this country.
Eventually, this wonderful liberty would redound against the interests of the public.
I believe if the whole story, of our own home production of food were told, it would not redound to the credit of this country.
One striking fact is that the vast imports of foreign timber which we make do not always redound to the advantage of our own exports.
It certainly is not one that can be praised, and it does not redound to the credit of the statutory company itself.
One has to consider the by-pass round a picturesque village which may redound to the interests of the residents.
Does he think that redounds very greatly to the advantage of a paid police force as compared with an amateur police force?