hierarchy – WordReference.com Dictionary of English
UK: * UK and possibly other pronunciationsUK and possibly other pronunciations/ˈhaɪərɑː r ki/
WordReference Random House Learner’s Dictionary of American English © 2023
hi•er•ar•chy
/ˈhaɪəˌrɑrki, ˈhaɪrɑr-/
USA pronunciation
n.
[
countable
]
pl.
-chies.
-
any system of persons or things ranked one above another.
-
Religion
the persons in authority or having the highest power:
the party hierarchy.
hi•er•ar•chic/ˌhaɪəˈrɑrkɪk/
USA pronunciation
hi•er•ar•chi•cal,
adj.
hi•er•ar•chi•cal•ly,
adv.
See -arch-
/ˈhaɪəˌrɑrki, ˈhaɪrɑr-/
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2023
hi•er•ar•chy
(hī′ə rär′kē, hī′rär-),
USA pronunciation
n., pl.
-chies.
-
any system of persons or things ranked one above another.
-
Religion
government by ecclesiastical rulers.
-
the power or dominion of a hierarch.
-
an organized body of ecclesiastical officials in successive ranks or orders:
the Roman Catholic hierarchy.
-
Religion
one of the three divisions of the angels, each made up of three orders, conceived as constituting a graded body.
-
Religion
Also called celestial hierarchy. the collective body of angels.
-
Government
government by an elite group.
-
Linguistics
the system of levels according to which a language is organized, as phonemic, morphemic, syntactic, or semantic.
- Medieval Latin ierarchia, variant of hierarchia
- Middle French ierarchie
- Late Greek hierarchía rule or power of the high priest, equivalent. to hier-
hier
– + archía –
archy;
replacing Middle English jerarchie
- Medieval Latin hierarchia
- 1300–50
(hīə rär′kē, hīrär-),
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
hierarchy
/
ˈhaɪəˌrɑːkɪ
/
n
(
pl
-chies
)
-
a system of persons or things arranged in a graded order
-
a body of persons in holy orders organized into graded ranks
-
the collective body of those so organized
-
a series of ordered groupings within a system, such as the arrangement of plants and animals into classes, orders, families, etc
-
government by an organized priesthood
Etymology: 14
th
Century: from Medieval Latin hierarchia, from Late Greek hierarkhia, from hierarkhēs high priest; see
hiero-
,
-archy
ˌhierˈarchical, ˌhierˈarchic
adj
ˈhierˌarchism
n
‘hierarchy‘ also found in these entries (note: many are not synonyms or translations):