A writer should hyphenate a compound modifier that comes before the noun it modifies.
Take a look at this example:
No one likes a <em>two-faced </em>person.
As you can see, the modifier <em>two-faced </em>is hyphenated, first of all because it is compound (meaning that it has more than one word), and second of all because it comes before the noun <em>person </em>which it modifies.
Yes there could be 2 text structure depends on the topic in the story
It can be something meaning superior and someone might take that because they want to supreme where everyone will be there friend or in ancient times being ruler.
It is a composite number, because it can be divided by something other than 1 or itself.