Use lists to present steps, groups, or sets of information. Number lists when the order is important, like when you’re describing steps of a process. Don’t use numbers when the list’s order doesn’t matter.

See the lists section of the Style Guide for additional guidance on using and formatting lists.

Unordered Lists (Nested)

  • List item one
    • List item one
      • List item one
      • List item two
      • List item three
      • List item four
    • List item two
    • List item three
    • List item four
  • List item two
  • List item three
  • List item four

Ordered List (Nested)

Ordered lists are available in two styles: a numbered list and a lettered list.

The numbered style (default):

  1. List item one
    1. List item one
      1. List item one
      2. List item two
      3. List item three
      4. List item four
    2. List item two
    3. List item three
    4. List item four
  2. List item two
  3. List item three
  4. List item four

The lettered (alphabetical) style:

  1. List item one
    1. List item one
      1. List item one
      2. List item two
      3. List item three
      4. List item four
    2. List item two
    3. List item three
    4. List item four
  2. List item two
  3. List item three
  4. List item four

Description Lists

Currently only supported in plain HTML.

The description list element presents a list of groups of terms (<dt>) and descriptions (<dd>). Common uses for this element are to provide a glossary, a definition list, or to display metadata (a list of key-value pairs).

A glossary/definition list:

Beast of Bodmin
A large feline inhabiting Bodmin Moor.
Morgawr
A sea serpent.
Owlman
A giant owl-like creature.

A list of metadata:

Name
Godzilla
Born
1952
Birthplace
Japan
Color
Green

Source

These are WordPress-created core blocks that are built in to WordPress.