Across
- 3. the increase in the proportion of people living in towns and cities, when people are moving from countryside to the city
- 4. French philosopher who argued for the separation of powers
- 8. Goods and services necessary for manufacture such as land, labour, and
- 9. products that have undergone processing or assembly, distinguishing them from raw materials
- 12. Middle or, according to Marx, capitalist class
- 13. Writer and thinker advocating for educational equality for women
- 14. Period of rapid development of manufacturing characterised by the use of steam power, the growth of factories, and the mass production of goods.
- 16. Noble or upper classes of society
- 18. the policy of governments abstaining from interfering in the workings of the free market; letting things be without interference
- 19. Practice of alternating growth of different types of cultivated plants to preserve soil fertility and increase productivity
- 20. a person who sets up a business or businesses, taking on financial risks in the hope of profit
- 22. buildings or group of buildings where goods are manufactured or assembled chiefly by machine
Down
- 1. Government licence conferring the sole right to exclude others from making, using, or selling an invention
- 2. creation of substantial amount of standardised products in a constant flow, including and especially on assembly lines
- 5. Process of wide-scale development of manufacturing capacity
- 6. English philosopher who argued that human beings could improve and that it is the duty of governments to protect the rights of life, liberty, and property
- 7. Practice by which the manufacturing of products were done at home or in small workshops
- 10. organised group of workers in a trade, group of trades, or profession, formed to protect and further their rights and interests.
- 11. Activity of buying and selling, especially on large scale
- 15. French writer who advocated for the rights of free speech
- 17. People who purchase and use goods and services for own use
- 21. the process or policy of fencing in wasteland or common land so as to make it private property,
