Hierarchical relationship is the broader and narrower relationship between concepts. It is based on higher and lower levels in the hierarchy, where the higher hierarchical terms represent a class and the subordinate terms refer to its members.It should be established between a pair of concepts when the scope of one of them totally includes the scope of the other.  

The hierarchical relationship functions to clarify the scope of the concepts by placing them in the appropriate hierarchical branch.

Itis the primary feature that distinguishes a thesaurus or taxonomy from simple controlled lists and dictionaries. In a simple list, for example we can have the terms “Storage Vessels” and “Amphorae”. The fact that the Amphora is a storage vessel is not indicated anywhere, it is knowledge that the user should have. In a thesaurus this relationship is clearly stated as amphorae are classified as narrower terms in storage vessels

The following tags should be used:

BT (broader term), written as a prefix to the superordinate term.

NT (narrower term), written as a prefix to the subordinate term.

There are three types of hierarchical relationships:

Genus/Species relationships

It is the relationship  between a class or category and its members or species. This relationship is often called “IsA”. All children in this relationship should be a kind of, or type of the parent. The placement of a child may be tested by the all/some argument. E.g. some members of the class “Felines” are known as “Cats” , and all “Cats” by definition and irrespective of context, are regarded are “Felines”.

Figure: Some felines are cats, all cats are felines. These terms should be place in the same hierarchy.

Figure: Some pets are cats, some cats are pets. These terms should not be placed in the same hierarchy.

Whole/Part relationships

The hierarchical whole/part relationship refers to concepts , which are inherently included in another, regardless of context. Whole/part relationships are typically applied to geographic entities, parts of the body, disciplines of study, social structures and other types of concepts that are not readily placed into genus/species relationships. Each child should be a part of the parent and all the other ancestors above it.

Example: Social sciences

                    NT Anthropology  
                    NT Sociology

Instance relationships

It is the relation that identifies the link between a general category and the individual instances of that category.

Polyhierarchical relationships

Some concepts logically belong to more than one  class at the same time. This means that they have more than on broader term. In such cases, a hierarchical link should be established to all of the appropriate broader terms.

The structure that contains terms that have more than one broader terms is said to be polyhierarchical.

Figure: Example of polyhierarchical structure.

Figure: Example of polyhierarchical structure.  From AAT Getty. Term ID=300138750

Guide terms in hierarchies

Guide terms are phrases, usually placed in angle brackets, that are used to group together similar terms. They typically indicate the principles of division among a set of sibling terms. 
 

Example: Car

 <by motive power>

<by purpose>
 Diesel cars  Racing cars
 Electric cars  Sports cars