Hordeum vulgare
Barley is a Monocot.
Not exactly. The scientific name of a species consists of two parts: the genus name and the species name. The combination of these two names forms the species' unique binomial nomenclature. The family name is a higher taxonomic rank that includes multiple species within a group.
There are a number of what scientists call a 'cereal grain', uncluding wheat, barley, oats, and so forth.
The species name for a longleaf pine is Pinus palustris.
The second name in a scientific name represents the specific epithet, which identifies the particular species within a genus. It helps to differentiate between different species that may belong to the same genus.
No. Barley is not wheat at all. Barley and wheat are two different species of cereal grasses belonging to the family Triticeae. Barley does belong in the wheat family, which is, as mentioned, Triticeae, but is of an entirely different species from wheat. The species name for barley is Hordeum vulgare, and the species name for wheat is Triticum aestivum. No doubt either look similar, but both are quite different from the other.
Barley got its name fro the Barley sugar that was often made into small spiral sticks.
No, barley is a completely different species of grain from wheat, just as rye and oats are.
barley = ಜವೆಗೋಧಿ (javegOdhi)
Nicole Barley's birth name is Nicole Treuter.
Barley is a cereal of the species Hordeum vulgare, or its grains, often used as food or to make beer and other malted drinks.
Barley bristle is called Awn.
Barley straw in German is called "Gerstenstroh."
No. Barley and Oats are two different grains. They're both grasses, but other than that are not especially closely related; barley is much more closely related to wheat and rye than it is to oats.
Beer
Hordeum vulgars
While oats and barley are both important cereal grasses, they are completely different species. See the related links below for more information.