Rider /ˈrʌɪdə/ (n.)
1. (Legal Eaglery): To insert a tract of utter pedantry by means of a whole new piece of paper, titled “Rider A” since, in your spastic scrawl, is too verbose to fit in to the margin of the page in which the mark-up opportunity appears. In our digital age perhaps now a bygone artefact. When, in the good old days, lawyers negotiated by marking up draft contracts in handwriting, the rider was the “last” resort, and also a badge of honour. You fax over a whole page of calculation agent dispute fall-backs, or whatever other iatrogenic nonsense it may have occurred to you to interpose into an innocent legal agreement. Such fun.
2. (Biblical): One of those symbolic shadowy horsemen who portend the apocalypse.
3. (Decadent): ~ of the Storm. A pop song by The Doors.[1]
4. (Decadent): The pre-ordained list of stuff that must be laid on for Dangerboy when they headline at Knebworth which shall not include brown M&Ms.

The Jolly Contrarian’s Dictionary
The snippy guide to financial services lingo.™

Index — Click ᐅ to expand:

Tell me more
Sign up for our newsletter — or just get in touch: for ½ a weekly 🍺 you get to consult JC. Ask about it here.

See also

This article is about little bits of paper lawyers interleave in their mark-ups. For the horsemen of the apocalypse, see apocalypse.