Dictionary Definition
subordinate adj
2 subject or submissive to authority or the
control of another; "a subordinate kingdom" [ant: insubordinate]
3 of a clause; unable to stand alone
syntactically as a complete sentence; "a subordinate (or dependent)
clause functions as a noun or adjective or adverb within a
sentence" [syn: dependent] [ant: independent]
4 inferior in rank or status; "the junior
faculty"; "a lowly corporal"; "petty officialdom"; "a subordinate
functionary" [syn: junior-grade,
inferior, lower, lower-ranking,
lowly, petty(a), secondary, subaltern]
Noun
1 an assistant subject to the authority or
control of another [syn: subsidiary, underling, foot
soldier]
2 a word that is more specific than a given word
[syn: hyponym, subordinate
word]
Verb
1 rank or order as less important or consider of
less value; "Art is sometimes subordinated to Science in these
schools"
2 make subordinate, dependent, or subservient;
"Our wishes have to be subordinated to that of our ruler" [syn:
subdue]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
Adjective
- Placed in a lower class, rank, or position.
- Submissive to or controlled by authority.
Antonyms
Translations
placed in a lower class, rank, or position
- Danish: underordnet
- Polish: podrzędny , podrzędna , podrzędne
submissive to or controlled by authority
- Czech: podřízený
- Danish: underordnet
- Portuguese: subordinado , subordinada
See also
Noun
- One that is subordinate.
Synonyms
Antonyms
Verb
- To make subservient.
- To treat as of less value or importance.
Synonyms
Translations
To make subservient
To treat as of less value or importance
- Portuguese: subordinar, submeter, sujeitar
Italian
Adjective
subordinate- Feminine plural form of subordinato
Extensive Definition
- For the various types of hierarchy, see hierarchy (disambiguation)
The first use of the word "hierarchy" cited by
the Oxford
English Dictionary was in 1880, when it was used
in reference to the three orders of three angels as depicted by
Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite. Pseudo-Dionysius used the word
both in reference to the celestial hierarchy and the ecclesiastical
hierarchy. His term is derived from the Greek for 'Bishop'
(hierarch), and Dionysius is credited with first use of it as an
abstract noun. Since hierarchical churches, such as the Roman
Catholic and Eastern
Orthodox churches, had tables of organization that were
"hierarchical" in the modern sense of the word (traditionally with
God as the
pinnacle of the hierarchy), the term came to refer to similar
organizational methods in more general settings.
A hierarchy can link entities either directly or
indirectly, and either vertically or horizontally. The only direct
links in a hierarchy, insofar as they are hierarchical, are to
one's immediate superior or to one of one's subordinates, although
a system that is largely hierarchical can also incorporate other
organizational patterns. Indirect hierarchical links can extend
"vertically" upwards or downwards via multiple links in the same
direction. All parts of the hierarchy which are not vertically
linked to one another can nevertheless be "horizontally" linked by
traveling up the hierarchy to find a common direct or indirect
superior, and then down again. This is akin to two co-workers,
neither of whom is the other's boss, but both of whose chains of
command will eventually meet.
These relationships can be formalized
mathematically; see hierarchy
(mathematics).
Computation and electronics
Large electronic devices such as computers are usually composed of modules, which are themselves created out of smaller components (integrated circuits), which in turn are internally organized using hierarchical methods (e.g. using standard cells). The order of tasks in a computational algorithm is often managed hierarchically, with repeated loops nested within one another. Computer files in a file system are stored in an hierarchy of directories in most operating systems. In object-oriented programming, classes are organized hierarchically; the relationship between two related classes is called inheritance. In the Internet, IP addresses are increasingly organized in an hierarchy (so that the routing will continue to function as the Internet grows).Computer graphic imaging (CGI)
Within most CGI and computer animation programs is the use of hierarchies. On a 3D model of a human, the chest is a parent of the upper left arm, which is a parent of the lower left arm, which is a parent of the hand. This is used in modeling and animation of almost everything built as a 3D digital model.Biological taxonomy
In biology, the study of taxonomy is one of the most conventionally hierarchical kinds of knowledge, placing all living beings in a nested structure of divisions related to their probable evolutionary descent. Most evolutionary biologists assert a hierarchy extending from the level of the specimen (an individual living organism — say, a single newt), to the species of which it is a member (perhaps the Eastern Newt), outward to further successive levels of genus, family, order, class, phylum, and kingdom. (A newt is a kind of salamander (family), and all salamanders are types of amphibians (class), which are all types of vertebrates (phylum).) Essential to this kind of reasoning is the proof that members of a division on one level are more closely related to one another than to members of a different division on the same level; they must also share ancestry in the level above. Thus, the system is hierarchical because it forbids the possibility of overlapping categories. For example, it will not permit a 'family' of beings containing some examples that are amphibians and others that are reptiles — divisions on any level do not straddle the categories of structure that are hierarchically above it. (Such straddling would be an example of heterarchy.)Organisms are also
commonly described as assemblies of parts (organs) which are
themselves assemblies of yet smaller parts. When we observe that
the relationship of cell to organ is like that of the relationship
of organ to body, we are invoking the hierarchical aspects of
physiology. (The term "organic" is often used to describe a sense
of the small imitating the large, which suggests hierarchy, but
isn't necessarily hierarchical.) The analogy of organ to body also
extends to the relationship of a living being as a system that
might resemble an ecosystem consisting of
several living beings; physiology is thus hierarchically nested in
ecology.
Physics
In physics, the standard
model of reasoning on the nature of the physical world
decomposes large bodies down to their smallest particle
components. Observations on the subatomic (particle) level are
often seen as fundamental constituent axioms, on which conclusions
about the atomic and molecular levels depend. The relationships of
energy and gravity between celestial bodies are, in turn, dependent
upon the atomic and molecular properties of smaller bodies. In
energetics, energy
quality is sometimes used to quantify energy hierarchy.
Language and semiotics
In linguistics, especially in
the work of Noam
Chomsky, and of later generative
linguistics theories, such as Ray
Jackendoff's, words or sentences are often broken down into
hierarchies of parts and wholes. Hierarchical reasoning about the
underlying structure of language expressions leads some linguists
to the hypothesis that the world's languages are bound together in
a broad array of variants subordinate to a single Universal
Grammar.
Music
In music, the structure of a
composition is often understood hierarchically (for example by
Heinrich
Schenker (1868–1935, see Schenkerian
analysis), and in the (1985) Generative Theory of Tonal Music,
by composer Fred Lerdahl
and linguist Ray Jackendoff). The
sum of all notes in a piece is understood to be an all-inclusive
surface, which can be reduced to successively more sparse and more
fundamental types of motion. The levels of structure that operate
in Schenker's theory are the foreground, which is seen in all the
details of the musical score; the middle ground, which is roughly a
summary of an essential contrapuntal progression and voice-leading;
and the background or Ursatz, which is one
of only a few basic "long-range counterpoint" structures that are
shared in the gamut of tonal music literature.
The pitches and
form
of tonal
music are organized
hierarchically, all pitches deriving their importance from their
relationship to a tonic
key, and
secondary themes in other keys are brought back to the tonic in a
recapitulation of the primary theme. Susan
McClary connects this specifically in the sonata-allegro
form to the feminist hierarchy of gender (see above) in her
book Feminine Endings, even pointing out that primary themes were
often previously called "masculine" and secondary themes
"feminine."
Ethics, behavioral psychology, philosophies of identity
In ethics, various virtues are enumerated and
sometimes organized hierarchically according to certain brands of
virtue
theory.
In all of these examples, there is an asymmetry
of 'compositional' significance between levels of structure, so
that small parts of the whole hierarchical array depend, for their
meaning, on their membership in larger parts.
In the work of diverse theorists such as William
James (1842–1910), Michel
Foucault (1926–1984) and Hayden
White, important critiques of hierarchical epistemology are advanced.
James famously asserts in his work "Radical Empiricism" that clear
distinctions of type and category are a constant but unwritten goal
of scientific reasoning, so that when they are discovered, success
is declared. But if aspects of the world are organized differently,
involving inherent and intractable ambiguities, then scientific
questions are often considered unresolved. A hesitation to declare
success upon the discovery of ambiguities leaves heterarchy at an artificial
and subjective disadvantage in the scope of human knowledge. This
bias is an artifact of an aesthetic or pedagogical preference for
hierarchy, and not necessarily an expression of objective
observation.
Feminists,
Marxists,
anarchists, communists, critical
theorists and others criticize the hierarchies commonly found
within human society, especially in social relationships.
Hierarchies are present in all parts of society: in businesses,
schools, families, etc. These relationships are often viewed as
necessary. However, feminists, marxists, critical theorists and
others analyze hierarchy in terms of the values and power that it
arbitrarily assigns to one group over another. These scholars look
at hierarchy in terms of how it promotes and stabilizes the
oppression of women, racial and ethnic minorities, the poor and
working classes, gays, lesbians and other sexual minorities,
children, the elderly, etc.
Hierarchies in programming
The concept of hierarchies plays a large part in
object oriented programming. For more information see
Hierarchy (object-oriented programming) and memory
hierarchy.
Containment hierarchy
A containment hierarchy of the subsumption kind
is a collection of strictly nested sets. Each entry in the
hierarchy designates a set such that the previous entry is a strict
superset, and the next entry is a strict subset. For example, all
rectangles are quadrilaterals, but not all quadrilaterals are
rectangles, and all squares are rectangles, but not all rectangles
are squares. (See also: Taxonomy.) A
containment hierarchy of the compositional kind refers to parts and
wholes, as well as to rates of change. Generally the bigger changes
more slowly. Parts are contained in wholes and change more rapidly
than do wholes.
- In geometry:
- In biology:subsumption hierarchy
- compositional hierarchy: [population [organism [biological cell [macromolecule]]]]
- The Chomsky hierarchy in formal languages: recursively enumerable, context-sensitive, context-free, and regular
- In physics: subsumption hierarchy
- compositional hierarchy: [galaxy [star system [star]]]
Social hierarchies
Many human organizations, such as
governments, educational institutions, businesses, churches, armies
and political movements are hierarchical
organizations, at least officially; commonly seniors, called
"bosses", have more power
than their subordinates. Thus the relationship defining this
hierarchy is "commands" or "has power over". Some analysts question
whether power "actually" works in the way the traditional
organizational chart indicates, however. This view tends to
emphasize the significance of the informal
organization. See also chain of
command.
See also
References
- Valerie Ahl & T.F.H. Allen (1996). Hierarchy Theory. New York: Columbia University Press.
- Julie Nelson (1992). "Gender, Metaphor and the Definition of Economics". Economics and Philosophy, 8:103–125.
- A. Rosenbaum (1999). Les représentations hiérarchiques en philosophie. Paris: Desclee de Brouwer.
- Exploration, Exploitation, and Knowledge Management Strategies in Multi-Tier Hierarchical Organizations on SSRN
External links
- Principles and annotated bibliography of hierarchy theory
- Summary of the Principles of Hierarchy Theory — S.N. Salthe
- [http://ontomall.com:8081/workbench/ Wikipedia tree hierarchy of categories and pages under Computing]
subordinate in Catalan: Jerarquia
subordinate in Czech: Hierarchie
subordinate in Danish: Hierarki
subordinate in German: Hierarchie
subordinate in Estonian: Hierarhia
subordinate in Spanish: Jerarquía
subordinate in Esperanto: Hierarkio
subordinate in French: Hiérarchie
subordinate in Croatian: Hijerarhija
subordinate in Italian: Gerarchia
subordinate in Hebrew: היררכיה
subordinate in Hungarian: Hierarchia
subordinate in Dutch: Hiërarchie
subordinate in Japanese: ヒエラルキー
subordinate in Norwegian: Hierarki
subordinate in Polish: Hierarchia
subordinate in Portuguese: Hierarquia
subordinate in Romanian: Ierarhie
subordinate in Simple English: Power
structure
subordinate in Slovak: Hierarchia
subordinate in Serbian: Хијерархија
subordinate in Swedish: Hierarki
subordinate in Turkish: Hiyerarşi
subordinate in Chinese: 等级制度
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
accessory, adjuvant, aide, assistant, assort, auxiliary, below, beneath, bolt, categorize, classify, client, cog, collate, collateral, common, commonality, commonalty, contributory, creature, demeaning, dependent, deprive of freedom,
disadvantaged,
disenfranchise,
disfranchise,
divide, dominate, employee, enslave, enthrall, feudal, feudatory, flunky, follower, gradate, grade, group, hanger-on, helper, hireling, hoi polloi, hold
captive, hold down, hold in bondage, hold in captivity, hold in
leash, hold in subjection, homager, humble, in the shade, inferior, infra dig, junior, keep down, keep under,
lackey, lead captive,
less, lesser, liege, liege man, lightweight, low, lower, lower class, lower orders,
lowly, make dependent,
masses, minion, minor, modest, myrmidon, next to, ordinary, pawn, peon, peonize, poor relation, rank, retainer, riddle, right-hand man, satellite, screen, scrub, second fiddle, second rank,
second string, secondary, separate, serf, servant, servile, sieve, sift, size, slave, sort, sort out, staffer, stooge, sub, subaltern, subject, subjugate, subordinate to,
subservient,
subsidiary, supplementary, take
captive, third rank, third string, third stringer, tributary, under, underling, underprivileged,
understrapper,
vassal, vassalize, vulgar, yeoman, yes-man