Semilattices are employed to construct other order structures, or in conjunction with other completeness properties. • A
lattice is both a join- and a meet-semilattice. The interaction of these two semilattices via the
absorption law is what truly distinguishes a lattice from a semilattice. • The
compact elements of an algebraic
lattice, under the induced partial ordering, form a bounded join-semilattice. • By induction on the number of elements, any non-empty finite meet semilattice has a least element and any non-empty finite join semilattice has a greatest element. (In neither case will the semilattice necessarily be bounded.) • A
totally ordered set is a
distributive lattice, hence in particular a meet-semilattice and join-semilattice: any two distinct elements have a greater and lesser one, which are their meet and join. • A
well-ordered set is further a
bounded join-semilattice, as the set as a whole has a least element, hence it is bounded. • The
natural numbers \mathbb{N}, with their usual order are a bounded join-semilattice, with least element 0, although they have no greatest element: they are the smallest infinite well-ordered set. • Any single-rooted
tree (with the single root as the least element) of height \leq \omega is a (generally unbounded) meet-semilattice. Consider for example the set of finite words over some alphabet, ordered by the
prefix order. It has a least element (the empty word), which is an annihilator element of the meet operation, but no greatest (identity) element. • A
Scott domain is a meet-semilattice. • Membership in any set can be taken as a
model of a semilattice with base set because a semilattice captures the essence of set
extensionality. Let denote & Two sets differing only in one or both of the: • Order in which their members are listed; • Multiplicity of one or more members, :are in fact the same set. Commutativity and associativity of assure (1),
idempotence, (2). This semilattice is the
free semilattice over It is not bounded by because a set is not a member of itself. • Classical extensional
mereology defines a join-semilattice, with join read as binary fusion. This semilattice is bounded from above by the world individual. • Given a set the collection of partitions \xi of is a join-semilattice. In fact, the partial order is given by \xi \leq \eta if \forall Q \in \eta, \exists P \in \xi such that Q \subset P and the join of two partitions is given by \xi \vee \eta = \{ P \cap Q \mid P \in \xi \ \land \ Q \in \eta \} . This semilattice is bounded, with the least element being the singleton partition \{ S \} . ==Semilattice morphisms==