Search for crossword answers and clues

Answer for the clue "Group left of liberals ", 8 letters:
radicals

Alternative clues for the word radicals

Word definitions for radicals in dictionaries

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. (plural of radical English)

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
The Radicals were a parliamentary political grouping in the United Kingdom in the early to mid-19th century, who drew on earlier ideas of radicalism and helped to transform the Whigs into the Liberal Party .

Usage examples of radicals.

But for fear of shocking the respectable mob, who looks upon the Anarchists as the apostles of Satan, and because of their social position in bourgeois society, the would-be radicals ignore the activity of the Anarchists.

Last year in Berkeley, hard-core political radicals who had always viewed hippies as spiritual allies began to worry about the long-range implications of the Haight-Ashbury scene.

Unlike the dedicated radicals who emerged from the Free Speech Movement, the hippies were more interested in dropping out of society than they were in changing it.

If postponing action until victory was likely angered Ben Wade and the radicals, so be it.

Stanton had to engage in furious backtracking, growing connective tissue to the pro-slavery radicals through that foppish Massachusetts Senator, Sumner.

Key was a strange man, inconsistent, hating Lincoln and most of the radicals but hating slavery too, wanting McClellan in the White House but wanting to wait two more years to go through the folderol of election.

General, the radicals hate you and they fear you, and they are willing to sacrifice this army rather than see it victorious under you.

McClellan had planned for this eventuality, assuming that Lincoln would turn to Burnside, who was acceptable to the radicals, rather than to the respected Fitz-John Porter, the only general other than himself capable of facing Lee.

Some of these Herlandist radicals seem to find my arrival more traumatic than that of the Enemy, so long ago.

In Chicago, German revolutionaries, along with native-born radicals like Albert Parsons, formed Social Revolutionary clubs.

Living My Life, conveys the anger, the sense of injustice, the desire for a new kind of life, that grew among the young radicals of that day.

Only the radicals made an attempt to break the racial barriers: Socialists, Trotskyists, Communists most of all.

When you took a child like that during the sixties and you added marijuana, it sowed the seeds of the psychosis that most of these radicals are clearly exhibiting today.

Because the radicals would like nothing more than to see the church steeples disappear and turn them into abortion clinics.

During the free silver campaign, ex-Burgess McLuckie, one of the most genuine personalities in the Homestead strike, visited New York in an endeavor to enthuse the local radicals for free silver.