The list of verbs, nouns, prepositions and adjectives for
hierarchy

subject: General

1. What are adjectives for hierarchy?

The list contains adjectives for hierarchy sorted by frequency:

2. Verb examples for hierarchy:

Below there are verbs used with hierarchy. Some of them refer to a noun as a predicate, while others as objects.

What is an adjective for hierarchy

The aim of this page is to give you the answer for the followin questions: - what is an adjective for hierarchy; - adjective of hierarchy; - adjective examples for hierarchy; - hierarchy adjective; - adjective hierarchy; - hierarchy noun; - is hierarchy a noun.

Is hierarchy a noun?

A word hierarchy is a noun, that is described with adjectives, the most common are:

Adjectives to describe the hierarchy

A sentence is a group of words that together make up a coherent statement. Every element has an individual role. Below we will concentrate on adjectives.

The list of common adjectives for hierarchy

The adjective is a part of speech that modifies and enriches the noun. For the section General the frequently used adjective(s) is/are:

The table above lists adjectives that describe the noun. In order to fit searched word to its corresponding description, vocabulary is divided into five topics:
- General words, that refer to the popular written and spoken language;
- Business vocabulary, both simple and more specific words often used to describe economic phenomena;
- The field of statistics, an area closely related to this part of science;
- Law section, vocabulary specific for codes, laws and acts;
- IT section, used to describe programming language.

Selected words referring to the noun hierarchy are sorted by frequency. This means, that in the General section, adjectives describing a hierarchy may be different than in business section.

Verbs related to 'hierarchy'

Note that this section includes examples of verbs that are presented in two forms, as predicate and as part of the object. Note that all verbs associated with the noun 'book' include words like contain, present or verbs like read and publish. See examples:

But on the other hand:

The first two examples refer to a noun as a predicate, while the next two are an object.

Last updated: Jun 10, 2026

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