Latin.
That is why scientists were suppose to know how to speak it.
Binomial Nomenclature. In other words, using an organisms Genus and Species to classify them into categories.
Binomial nomenclature
Carl Linnaeus (1707–1778), a Swedish botanist, invented the modern system of binomial nomenclature.
he invented the system in which he separated animals and plants and gave them latin names
Well, binomial nomenclature actually classifies an organism by a more scientific name... But not just any name, the names are given in the latin language. It's also a name that sounds the same in every language. No, not everyone speaks latin, but if you use the phrase "Mephitis mephitis"(meaning skunk) to any scientist in the biological field, no matter what language he speaks, he will know you're talking about a skunk... and maybe he'll assume your a scientist too. (;Basically, binomial nomenclature is simply making the scientific name of a species recognizable by all languages. That's why it's used.-V.307
binomial system
Usually the genus and species names are used to identify different organisms.
binomial system
binomial system
A binomial system is binomial nomenclature which is the formal system of naming specific species.
binomial system
The binomial system is a voting system used for parliamentary elections in Chile.
binomial system
The related link should help you.
A binomial nomenclature is the two name system of naming living things used in classification. The currently used binomial nomenclature was developed by Linneus.
dichotomous keying
Binomial nomenclature. And it's a system of classifying organisms.