Crossword-Solution: PHYSIOCRAT 10 letters, 1 clue 🏆 scrabble score: 20

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Word Word Type Definition
Physiocrat n. One of the followers of Quesnay of France, who, in the
18th century, founded a system of political economy based upon the
supremacy of natural order.

We have 1 clue for the answer “PHYSIOCRAT”

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LAISSES faire proponent 1 answer
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Hint 1 meaning
To cause to flow in a stream, as a liquid or anything flowing like a liquid, either out of a vessel or into it; as, to pour water from a pail; to pour wine into a decanter; to pour oil upon the waters; to pour out sand or dust.
Hint 2 anagram
OPRU
Hint 3 another clue
Stream
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Sentences with PHYSIOCRAT (5)

Another group of thinkers, who widely differed in their principles, though some of them had contributed articles to the Encyclopaedia, [Footnote: Quesnay and Turgot, who, though not professedly a Physiocrat, held the same views as the sect.] also did much to make it a power.
The Idea of Progress J. B. Bury 2003
Furthermore, the old Physiocrat predicted that if the United States ever followed such a policy, they would lose their prestige as a democratic and peaceful nation.
Thomas Jefferson Gilbert Chinard 2011
The answer of Jefferson has unfortunately disappeared and was probably destroyed by Du Pont; but another letter of the old Physiocrat permits us to reconstruct its contents.
Thomas Jefferson Gilbert Chinard 2011
The advantages too, of lessening the occasions of risking our peace on the ocean, and of planting the consumer on our own soil by the side of the grower of produce, are so palpable, that no temporary suspension of injuries on her part, or agreements founded on that, will now prevent our continuing in what we have begun.[489] So wrote the supposed agrarian to the founder of physiocracy, and this is a _prima facie_ evidence that Jefferson was not a Physiocrat of the first water.
Thomas Jefferson Gilbert Chinard 2011
Human nature may, through infirmity or perversity, willfully break over the beneficent trend of the laws of nature; but to the Physiocrat's sense of the matter the laws are none the less immutable and irrefragable on that account.
The Place of Science in Modern Civilisation and Other Essays Thorstein Veblen 2012