elletaria is the genus name
cardamomum is the species name
On google just look up scientific names for plants and animals it works just try it.
For animals: organism
Most of the scientific names for animals are derived from Latin language. Latin is, however, considered a dead language.
Animals and plants (living things) have scientific names. A cell phone is not an animal or a plant
Scientific names are important for two reasons. (1) There are so many species of animals in the world that scientific names are the one unique name for that one unique species and (2) through scientific names, you can see how the different species of animals are related. Black squirrels and red squirrels aren't the same species, but they're related and their scientific names reflect this.
The original language of botany is Latin. Many botanical terms and scientific names of plants are derived from Latin.
Good question, I was actually trying to find out last week. Scientist usually give names to plants and animals. It's because of how the plant or animal reacted in it's enviroment.
A 'dead' language was needed, so that there could be no doubt about the names - there are pet names and official names for animals in most languages, so it can be hard to get a good translation from one modern language into several other modern languages. Latin was the chosen dead language because it was and is quite well known by educated people in Europe, which was the base for scientific development at the time.
Foods do not have scientific names. Species of plants, animals, fungi, have Latin names, but cheese is none of these.
Scientific names are very specific. The common names of many animals are just that, common. One common name may be the widely accepted name for multiple animals or plants. Common names for plants and animals also vary with region.
Latin is used for classification of animals and plants and micro organismsex: elletaria cardamomum family zingeberaceaeelletaria is the genus namecardamomum is the species name
latin