BENEFICIARIES - meaning and definition. What is BENEFICIARIES
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What (who) is BENEFICIARIES - definition

PERSON OR OTHER LEGAL ENTITY WHO RECEIVES MONEY OR OTHER BENEFITS FROM A BENEFACTOR
Beneficiaries; Heiress (beneficiary)

Beneficiaries         
·pl of Beneficiary.
beneficiary         
¦ noun (plural beneficiaries) a person who gains benefit from something, especially a trust or will.
Beneficiary         
·adj Bestowed as a gratuity; as, beneficiary gifts.
II. Beneficiary ·noun A feudatory or vassal; hence, one who holds a benefice and uses its proceeds.
III. Beneficiary ·noun One who receives anything as a gift; one who receives a benefit or advantage; ·esp. one who receives help or income from an educational fund or a trust estate.
IV. Beneficiary ·adj Holding some office or valuable possession, in subordination to another; holding under a feudal or other superior; having a dependent and secondary possession.

Wikipedia

Beneficiary

A beneficiary (also, in trust law, cestui que use) in the broadest sense is a natural person or other legal entity who receives money or other benefits from a benefactor. For example, the beneficiary of a life insurance policy is the person who receives the payment of the amount of insurance after the death of the insured.

Most beneficiaries may be designed to designate where the assets will go when the owner(s) dies. However, if the primary beneficiary or beneficiaries are not alive or do not qualify under the restrictions, the assets will probably pass to the contingent beneficiaries. Other restrictions such as being married or more creative ones can be used by a benefactor to attempt to control the behavior of the beneficiaries. Some situations such as retirement accounts do not allow any restrictions beyond death of the primary beneficiaries, but trusts allow any restrictions that are not illegal or for an illegal purpose.

The concept of a "beneficiary" will also frequently figure in contracts other than insurance policies. A third-party beneficiary of a contract is a person whom the parties intend to benefit from its provisions but who is not a party to the contract. A software distributor, for example, may seek provisions protecting its customers from infringement claims. A software licensor may include in its agreements provisions that protect those who provided code to that licensor.

In the context of development aid, the term "beneficiaries" refer to the persons and the communities that use the project outputs: the entities that development-aid projects.

Examples of use of BENEFICIARIES
1. The male beneficiaries reaching the age of 26 and women beneficiaries who marry are struck off from the list.
2. Beneficiaries include local governments, hospitals and universities.
3. Religious organizations are historically the greatest beneficiaries.
4. "The local plans organized picketing by beneficiaries.
5. The largest beneficiaries are those in the Kingdom,» Aboodi said.