i think its taxonomy
Answer
The first part of a scientific name (such as the Homo in Homo sapiens or the Giraffa in Giraffa camelopardalis) is called the genus, of which the plural is genera.
The genus (always capitalised) is the first part of a scientific name. The plural is genera.Take the example Diomedea exulans, the Wandering albatross - in this case Diomedea is the genus!
The scientific name for the word "still" would simply be its common name. Scientific names typically apply to living organisms.
I believe you are asking what the first word of an organism's scientific name is. If that is the case, the first word in an organism's scientific name is the organism's taxonomic genus.
hell no
In an organism's scientific name, the first word is the genus, and the second word is the species.
The first word in a two word name of an organism indentify is genus or species == ==usually it's the genusThe first word in an organism's scientific name is the genus. The second word in an organism's scientific name is the species.
The first word in a two word name of an organism indentify is genus or species == ==usually it's the genusThe first word in an organism's scientific name is the genus. The second word in an organism's scientific name is the species.
The first word in a two word name of an organism indentify is genus or species == ==usually it's the genusThe first word in an organism's scientific name is the genus. The second word in an organism's scientific name is the species.
The first word of an organism's scientific name is the genus. The scientific name follows a binomial nomenclature system, where the first word represents the genus to which the organism belongs, and the second word represents the species within that genus.
The first word in a two word name of an organism indentify is genus or species == ==usually it's the genusThe first word in an organism's scientific name is the genus. The second word in an organism's scientific name is the species.
Organisms
genus