It is the beneficiary of an annuity.
In regards to life insurance, contingent usually means secondary. For example a contingent beneficiary is a secondary beneficiary, not the primary beneficiary. The contingent beneficiary would receive the proceeds from a life insurance policy if the primary beneficiary were not alive when the insured person dies.
Generally, the proceeds will be paid to the named beneficiary. However, the survivor should discuss the situation with an attorney.
farmer's lung
It means that the land of chicken is on fire
FAT Allocation is called File Allocation Table, it is a way that most USB sticks are formatted. It is used so you can share files with other computers, without a formatted device, it would not function.
money set aside for your use.
I don't understand what you mean by ''he is a rider'', do you mean he is the named beneficiary? If so and he dies prior to you, you need to name another beneficiary, or perhaps you already have a 'second' or contingent beneficiary, in that case the money would be paid to this contengient if the primary beneficary is deceased.
An irrevocable beneficiary is someone named in a life insurance policy or retirement account who cannot be removed or changed without their consent. This designation provides the beneficiary with guaranteed rights to any proceeds from the policy or account once the policyholder passes away. The policyholder cannot modify the beneficiary designation unilaterally once it is established as irrevocable.
Some health insurance plans offer a AD&D Life Insurance Policy. That is why you would name a beneficiary for a health insurance company.
'Resource Allocation' is a management terminology phrase for the scheduling of activities and resources needed to complete them whilst taking into consideration both the time needed to complete and effort it will take.
If you mean a person outside the US then the answer is, yes.