The first part of the scientific name is the genus name. The second part is the species name. If there is a third part, it refers to the subspecies name.
Here's an example:
Canis lupus familiaris
"Canis" is the name of the genus that the domestic dog belongs to, along with wolves and coyotes. "lupus" refers to the species within the Canis genus that wolves and domestic dogs belong to. "familiaris" refers to the subspecies that only domestic dogs, and not wolves, belong to. Note that only the genus name in a scientific name starts with a capital letter.
The first word is the genus and the second is the species.
The first word (statrting with a capital letter) is the genus in Latin, and the second word (with a lower case letter) is the species also in Latin.
genus and class
genus and species
A binomen is a name with two parts, or a scientific name at the rank of species with two terms, a generic name and a specific name.
A binomen is a two-part Latin name used in the scientific classification of organisms. It consists of the genus name followed by the species name, forming the species' scientific name. For example, in Homo sapiens, "Homo" is the genus and "sapiens" is the species.
The scientific name for Lianas is the Linnaeus formal system of naming species. Every name has two parts, which is known as the binomial nomenclature.
In the scientific nomenclature of an organism out of the two parts, first part is called the genus and the second part species. This naming is called binomial system of nomenclature.
binomial nomenclature the 1st part of the name is genus the second part is species
A scientific name has two parts - the genus and the species. The genus name is capitalized and both parts are italicized or underlined when written. For example, Homo sapiens is the scientific name for humans, with Homo being the genus and sapiens being the species.
The scientific name for lianas is typically derived from the genus name "Liana" followed by the species name. Commonly, you may see the scientific names written as "Liana spp." which indicates multiple species within the Liana genus.
All scientific names of organisms begin with the genus name followed by the species name.
The scientific name does not change, but the common name may be different in different parts of the world.
Only Latin for the binomial scientific name, but in colloquial names some parts are taken from Greek as well.