The scientific name for the word "still" would simply be its common name. Scientific names typically apply to living organisms.
The scientific name for a species in the Linnaean classification system consists of two words: the genus name and the species name.
Jawless fish are Phylum Chordata, they are also known as paraphyletic, they still are around today.
The first to use two words to form a scientific name was Carl Linnaeus, who is the inventor of binomial nomenclature in Biology. It uses a two part designation for the identification of species. Though usually formed from Latin words, other languages are sometimes incorporated into the naming as well.
The scientific name for the cocoa tree is theobroma cacao. The genus, theobroma, is derived from the Greek words for "food of the gods".
The scientific name for squids is Decapodiformes.
the genus and species
The scientific name for a species in the Linnaean classification system consists of two words: the genus name and the species name.
sweet corn if it is off the cob and corn on the cob if it is still on the cob.
The scientific prefix for same is homo- and the prefix for different is hetero-, as in homozygous and heterozygous.
Hippopotomonstrosesquipedaliophobia. Ironic, isn't it.
Jawless fish are Phylum Chordata, they are also known as paraphyletic, they still are around today.
genus
They are silly and like long words. ;)
* The name of the genus (plural genera) * The specific epithet (species name)
gallactorhea
The scientific name is Nephelium lappaceum but you can still use Rambutan in English.
I think you mean the SCIENTIFIC name of the animal. It depends on what animal, and it is in Latin.Latrodectus bishopi, for example, is the scientific name of a Red Widow Spider.because different languages have different words for different animals scientist use a scientific name as a universal name for a specific animal animal.