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Question: The science of naming plants is known as A)Classification B)Identification C)Nomenclature D)...

The science of naming plants is known as
A)Classification
B)Identification
C)Nomenclature
D)Taxonomy

Explanation

Solution

When scientific knowledge of such species changes, scientific names are vulnerable to change. In order to satisfy more complex biological distinctions, certain genera may be separated into broader subgroups.

Complete answer:
There are graded taxonomic systems in three ways. They are artificial classification, natural classification and phylogenetics classification.
In biology, identification is the technique of assigning a pre-existing taxon classification to an individual organism.
Taxonomy covers all the plants, animals and microorganisms of the earth and is the study of the naming, description and grouping of organisms.
The practice of naming an object is as a matter of fact, a science called nomenclature. Binomial nomenclature is followed world-wide to classify an organism. For of body, which is a mixture of genera and organisms, there is a scientific name. Several of these names contain the Latin language. For starters, the scientific name of humans is Homo sapiens, and that of frogs is Rana tigrina.

Binomial nomenclature ('two-term naming scheme'), also known as binomial nomenclature ('two-word naming system') or binary nomenclature, is a systematic system for naming species of living things by assigning a name composed of two sections to each one, both of which, while they may be based on other language terms, use grammatical Latin terms. Such a word is referred to as a binomial name (only a binomial, a binomial name, or a scientific name may be shortened to 'binomial; a Latin name is often referred to more informally.

Hence, the correct answer is option (C)

Note: A number of internationally recognized codes of law, the two most important of which are International Code of Zoological Nomenclature (ICZN), International Code of Bacterial Nomenclature (ICBN), International Code of Nomenclature for Algae, Fungi and Plants, control the use of binomial nomenclature (ICNafp). Although these two codes have common fundamental ideas that underlie binomial nomenclature, both in the vocabulary they use and in their individual rules, there are many differences.