no
^ that person is wrong.
it's true. scientific names should be either underlined or in italics. - www.interaktv.com/articles/scinames.htm
In scientific writing, it is common practice to italicize scientific names when they refer to a species or genus. Underlining is no longer a standard practice.
No, not always, certain standerds call for certain ways to put things. Sometimes they will only capatilize it.
yes it should
yes
yes
All scientific names of organisms begin with the genus name followed by the species name.
Scientific names are specific to each type of organism that they describe, thus there is no scientific name to classify all 'oil seeds'.
Scientific names are written in binomial nomenclature format, with the genus name followed by the species name. The genus name is always capitalized, and both names are italicized or underlined. For example, humans are known as Homo sapiens, with Homo being the genus and sapiens the species name.
No, not all scientific names have to have two Latin words. Some scientific names consist of a single word, particularly in cases where the genus or species is named after a person or a specific characteristic. The format of two Latin words (genus and species) is known as binomial nomenclature.
The scientific name of the dragonfly in the Philippines is 'Anisoptera.'
The baobab tree is correctly called Adansonia digitata. Remember that all scientific names are either in italics or underlined, and the species begins with a lower case letter, while the Genus begins with a upper case letter.
Scientific names are composed of the GENUS name, which is capitalized, and the species name, which is always lower case. The entire scientific name is ALWAYS underlined or italicized.
Names of airplanes, ships, all vessels are underlined or italicized.
In APA style, names of magazines are italicized rather than underlined.
In general, longer works (such as novels) get underlined. Shorter works (short stories, poems, essays) go in quotes. But if your using a word processor, you can just put all titles in italics.
An organism's scientific name consists of a genus name and a species name. For example, the gray wolf's scientific name is Canis lupus. Notice that only the genus name starts with a capital letter, whereas the species name is all lowercase. Also, when writing a scientific name, either write it in italics, or if you are writing by hand, the genus and species are underlined. Ps this is lame
In APA style, references should be listed in hanging indent format without italics or underlining for the publication titles. However, if you are writing by hand or using a typewriter, underlining can be used instead of italics for the titles.
All genus names begin with a capital letter. All specific names begin with a lowercase letter. Usually both words are underlined or italicized.
Yes, all organisms have scientific names. Thus planarians have scientific names too.
All genus names begin with a capital letter. All specific names begin with a lowercase letter. Usually both words are underlined or italicized.
It all depends on what format in which you are writing. When I was still in school, I primarily had to use the MLA format. In MLA you are required to underline website names. This is the website that I always used to make sure my style was correct.... http://owl.english.purdue.edu/
The two parts in scientific names are the genus and the specific epithet or species name.The genus and species are the last two classification in the Linnaeus hierarchy.There are certain rules on writing and typing the scientific names.Some of them_:-The genus name can be written alone to designate all species on that genus.i.e:Zea-describes all tall annual grass with separate female and male flowers-The species name however cannot be written alone and must follow the full genus name.i.e:Zea mays or Z. mays (corn)-In printing,the scientific names must be in Italics.i.e:Homo sapiens-In writing,the scientific names must be underlined separately..