The genus is Homo, the species is Sapien "thus Homo-Sapien". your on your own with the sub species though, because I have no idea :P
The subspecies was sapien too if i remember correctly.
Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, and Species
They are useful for scientists to seperate genus and species
Color, size, extremities, where they live, how they move Most of the determinations of how to classify were done by male scientists. Some female scientist did some other classification of some plants that were different from the typical male classification and that were very reasonable. So then there were two ways to classify. In one, these two are closest, but in the other those two are closest. Which shows us that classification of species is somewhat dependent on who does it. Don't ask my cat.
Scientists use the scientific classification system to classify animals. The scientific classification system is broken down into seven parts: kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, and species.
It is scientific name for humans. Scientists have developed a system to name all the species on this planet. Each animals has a species name and a genus name.
Organisms are classified into kingdoms, phylums, classes, orders, families, genuses, and species. There are several subcategories, such as subspecies. An organism's scientific name is the combination of its genus and subspecies (ex. Puma Concolor, Puma is the genus, concolor is the species).
Genus species or when writing it in hand it should be Genus species, but underlined.
All human subspecies are named with the scientific classification of the genus, "homo", followed by the scientific name of the species, whichever one it may be.
Kingdom (Regnum)-- Division (Phylum)---- Class (Classis)------ Order (Ordo)-------- Family (Familia)---------- Genus (Genus)------------ Species (Species)-------------- Subspecies(Subspecies)
Scientists classify men under the genus Homo, along with other species like Homo sapiens, Homo neanderthalensis, and Homo erectus.
The groups that taxonomists (that's the name for people who classify species) use are Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species.
genus and species
The most specific categories of classification are species and subspecies. These categories are used in biological taxonomy to classify and differentiate between closely related organisms. Species denotes a group of organisms with similar physical characteristics that can interbreed, while subspecies further divides a species into smaller groups with distinct geographical or phenotypic variations.
Genus and species are two taxonomic ranks in the classification of organisms. The genus is a broader category that groups closely related species together, while the species is a more specific category that refers to a particular type of organism. In scientific naming, the genus name is written first, followed by the species name, forming the binomial (two-part) species name.
Scientists classify living organisms according to a taxonomy system. This includes phylum, genus, family, etc. Scientists do this so that it is possible to compare species.
The scientific name of an organism includes the genus and species name. The genus refers to a group of closely related species, while the species name is unique to a particular organism within that genus. Together, the genus and species name form the binomial nomenclature system used in taxonomy to classify organisms.
The two categories of organisms used in a scientific name are the genus and the species. The genus is always written with an initial capital letter and the species is written in lowercase. Both names together form the organism's unique scientific name.