binomial nomenclature - two-part system for naming organisms, Linnaeus - "father of taxonomy" who developed binomial nomenclature for organisms, taxonomy - the field of classifying and naming organisms, mammal - the class that humans belong to, chordata - the phylum that humans belong to, plant - eukaryotic, multicellular, autotrophic, protist - unicellular eukaryote, such as amoeba and paramecium, bacteria - prokaryotes with cell walls made of peptidoglycan, archaea - prokaryotes that generally live in extreme environments, cellulose - polysaccharide found in plant cell walls, chitin - polysaccharide found in fungi cell walls, domain - broadest taxon in modern biological classification system, taxon - a group of organisms classified together in taxonomy, eukarya - domain that contains all organisms made up of eukaryotic cells, genus and species - used for a species' binomial name, Latin - language used for scientific names, Levels of taxonomy (broadest > most specific) - Domain>Kingdom>Phylum>Class>Order>Family>Genus>Species,

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