Philip Bouquett or Bouquet (1669–1748) was a French linguist who became Regius Professor of Hebrew at the University of Cambridge.
Bouquett was from La Rochelle in France and sent as a refugee to be educated at Westminster School.
[1] When a vacancy occurred in the professorship of Hebrew in 1704, which it was thought desirable to confer on Henry Sike, Bouquett was temporarily appointed to it in the absence of Sike, a better-known orientalist.
He died senior fellow of Trinity on 12 February 1748, aged 79.
As a Fellow of Trinity he refused to sign the petition against Richard Bentley; he was considered eccentric if rich.