Planet is a Greek word tht means "wandering star" but everyone ( including scientist ) still call it planets
Planet Venus doesn't has any scientific name. (Its just Venus because its named after the Greek goddess of beauty, and gods don't have any scientific names.. :P) You can use the systematic name which is 'Sol II'. (But it is only used in fiction)
The scientific name for clam is Tridacna maxima.
All animals have only 1 official scientific name, that is one of the advantages to the scientific naming system.
Genus
No. The planet's names are: Mercury, Mars, Earth, Venus, Neptune, Jupiter, Uranus , and Saturn. (Pluto is now a dwarf planet, not a planet.)
It depends on what you are asking. Do you want the names of the planets and their corresponding moons, or the scientific name of the moon, which is satellite?
Earth is the scientific name
Many do, some are pending scientific names.
Scientific names are based on biological and evolutionary relationships.
A dwarf planet/durnamiculositus
Scientific names contain information about organisms.
Yes, all organisms have scientific names. Thus planarians have scientific names too.
That IS the scientific name.
Planet Venus doesn't has any scientific name. (Its just Venus because its named after the Greek goddess of beauty, and gods don't have any scientific names.. :P) You can use the systematic name which is 'Sol II'. (But it is only used in fiction)
because there are so many different variations of scientific names.
the scientific names is Basidiomycetes
Well there is many scientific names but you have to make sure that it make sense