Nice, thanks.
But being curious, could anyone explain the difference between the use of:
be benefited / get benefited
The first is merely awkward. The second is completely unnatural.
I really (REALLY!) recommend you don't try to use either one.
I'm not a teacher, but I write for a living. Please don't ask me about 2nd conditionals, but I'm a safe bet for what reads well in (American) English.
Sure, I won't use it.
I am just curious to understand the difference between them, because I see that they are frequently used.
When I google "be benefited" I get 3,210,000 results which are more then the 599,000 results of "get benefited"
Ok. Another question:
Is "I will get many benefits" correct?
"benefits" as a noun might mean something else - perks
Trust me, just use "will benefit me in the following stages...", if you really want to use "benefit". "be/get benefited" sounds a bit awkward.