If it's a male goat, caper or hircus. If it's a she-goat, capra.
The domestic goat's scientific name is Capra aegagrus hircus.
The Latin name for a domestic goat is Capra aegagrus hircus.
The domestic goat is a subspecies of Capra aegagrus, which means "goat wild-goat" in Latin and Latinized Greek.
Its name is Latin for "horned male goat" or "goat horn". It's commonly represented in the form of a sea-goat.
Latin. It comes from the words caper, "goat," and cornu, "horn."
The Latin word for a cow is bovem. The Latin word for horse is equo, the word for pig is sus, and goat is hircum.
'Caper' is Latin for goat.
A bezoar goat is another term for a bezoar ibex - a species of wild goat, Latin name Capra aegagrus, native to Asia Minor and the Middle East, also found on Crete.
In Portuguese, "Cabral" means someone who lives on a goat farm; essentially "goat farmer".(From the Latin capralis 'place of goats' or capra'goat'.)
The constellation Capricornus, often associated with the sea-goat, derives its name from the Latin word "capricornus," meaning "horned goat." The name can be traced back to ancient Roman astronomy, but its origins are rooted in earlier Greek culture, where the constellation was linked to the god Pan, depicted as a goat with a human torso. The Greeks referred to it as "Aigokeros," highlighting its goat-like features.
The zoological name of a goat is Capra aegagrus hircus.
A bezoar ibex is another term for a bezoar goat - a species of wild goat, Latin name Capra aegagrus, native to Asia Minor and the Middle East, also found on Crete.
The genus name for a goat is a Capra.