Quote:
What, Sesame ? Reads like Classical Greek to me. Maybe some Latin too ?
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Its only
Latin Mel, I'm referring to the last two posts. I think that Latin has a grace which no other European language has. Also many words in English, French, Italian or German have their Origin in Latin. Most species have their scientific names in Latin.
In old times, upto mid 18th century, scientists whimsically referred to plants and animals with their common names. But these names were Local and varied from region to region. So two people might have been talking about the same animal unknowingly and imagine them to be different due to their fanciful local names!
This problem was solved by
Carl Linnaeus (Swedish biologist) in 1758 AD. He proposed a universal naming system called
binomial nomenclature. According to him each species should have
a unique name and everyone should call it by that name in the scientific community. Binomial, as you can guess means two names, one
personal name and one
surname(
family name =
genus). Its very similar to human names, like in
Albert Einstein, Albert is his personal name, Einstein is the family name. As a convention, this scientific name was chosen mostly from Latin words. Hence the
Latin Name. Later more words are added to denote regional variations. Anyway, in a Latin name, the family name stands first and then comes the personal name. So many species can share the family name, like brothers and sisters, but there is only one personal name. Like there may be many Einsteins, but only one
Albert Einstein.
Eg.
Tiger
Latin name: Panthera tigris.
subspecies:
Panthera tigris tigris (Royal Bengal tiger)
Panthera tigris balica (Bali tiger became extinct in 1937)

Panthera tigris altaica (Siberian tiger)
Panthera tigris amoyensis (South China tiger)
Panthera tigris corbetti (Indochinese tigers, Thailand, named after Jim Corbett, only 1000 left in the world!)
Panthera tigris sumatrae (Sumatra tigers, only about 500!)
Panthera pardus (Leopard)
Panthera onca (Jaguar)
Panthera leo (Lion)
Forgive me, if I bored you to hell with Latin, Linnaeus, Lions and Tigers.