0 arranged according to people's or things' level of importance, or relating to such a system: --
1 arranged in an order from the most to the least important --
a hierarchical structure/system/relationship
Seven hierarchical layers is more than enough for all but the largest corporations.
This approach has the potential to eliminate from archaeological enquiry topics of struggle and conflict within inherently unequal hierarchical structures.
As can be seen, this view shows the hierarchical structure of the discourse by displaying the summary for each block, indented appropriately.
By descending the hierarchical tree, we find that there are seventeen leaf nodes in the taxonomy.
It is a bond, but an extremely hierarchical bond, and by no means equalizes the differences between men as it is supposed to do.
Following the correlational analyses, relative associations between the domains of meaning and psychological distress levels were explored using hierarchical multiple regression analyses.
More specifically, the aspectual properties of the verb are determined by the hierarchical configuration in which subject and verb appear with respect to each other.
What organizes these diverse traditions and theories into a coherent outlook is the hierarchical relationship between human knowledge and divinely revealed knowledge.
The hierarchical nature of the corps, however, produced the same problem that early efforts at debating had done.