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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