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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Annuitant

Annuitant \An*nu"i*tant\, n. [See Annuity.] One who receives, or its entitled to receive, an annuity.
--Lamb.

Wiktionary
annuitant

n. The recipient of an annuity.

WordNet
annuitant

n. the recipient of an annuity

Wikipedia
Annuitant

An annuitant is a person who is entitled to receive benefits from an annuity.

Since 2000, in the United States of America, Federal and State agencies have allowed the re-hiring of retired employees without the loss of their retirement benefits. Such a "re-hire" is referred to as an annuitant. Often a maximum number of hours per year which the annuitant may work is specified.

For instance, the State of California has posted its guidelines.

This concept often allows agencies to benefit from the experience of retired employees who may be relied upon to share their experience and training with new hires, or to supplement or "bridge" areas where person power is needed but not currently affordable.

Usage examples of "annuitant".

Colney had to be overcome afresh, and he fled, but managed, with two or three of his bitter phrases, to make a cuttle-fish fight of it, that oppressively shadowed his vanquisher: The Daniel Lambert of Cities: the Female Annuitant of Nations:--and such like, wretched stuff, proper to Colney Durance, easily dispersed and outlaughed when we have our vigour.

The commodore must be a reemployed annuitant, protected in his position by the Gray Rights laws.

In his speech he assigned the alteration of the currency as the chief cause of the calamity, since it operated injuriously on all classes except the fundholder and annuitant, and by its ruinous effects on private contracts, as well as public payments, was calculated to endanger all kinds of property.

Who had ever said, for instance, that the fund-holders and annuitants felt the general pressure?

Winnington moved, that all the public creditors, as well as the South-Sea annuitants, should be comprehended.

Behind them, the twenty or so annuitants who worked under me had formed two lines, a cordon for my perp walk.

Thus the state governments were placed in the easy situation of rich annuitants, who had surrendered the control of some political capital in order to enjoy with less care the opportunities of a plethoric income.

The country's annuitants had for type 'the figure with the helmet of the Owl-Goddess and the trident of the Earth-shaker, seated on a wheel, at the back of penny-pieces.

She did her best to feel an omen and sound it, in his question 'whether the yearly increasing army of the orderly annuitants and their parasites does not demonstrate the proud old country as a sheath for pith rather than of the vital run of sap.

On the 29th of May, the stock had risen as high as five hundred, and about two-thirds of the government annuitants had exchanged the securities of the state for those of the South Sea Company.

Many of the government annuitants expressed dissatisfaction against the directors.

The second will was identical with the first in language except that its terms were reversed and instead of being the residuary legatee, Sanford was given a comparatively small annuity, and the Elmores were made residuary legatees instead of annuitants.

On that fund there are, if I remember a right, some seventeen annuitants who are in the receipt of eleven hundred a-year, the proceeds of their own self-supporting Institution.

There are four classes of men who pay the debts of the state: the proprietors of the land, those engaged in trade, the laborers and artificers, and, in fine, the annuitants either of the state or of private people.