| ¿µ¹® | nomenclature | ÇÑ±Û | ¸í¸í¹ý |
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| ¼³¸í | ÇØºÎÇÐ ±¸Á¶³ª ¹Ì»ý¹° µîÀÇ ¸íĪÀÇ ºÐ·ù°èÅë. |
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| FZS | Fellow of the Zoological Society |
|---|---|
| BAN | Basle Anatomic Nomenclature; ¹ÙÁ© ÇØºÎÇÐ ¸í¸í¹ý = BNA |
| NA | 1) Narcotic Anonymous 2) Nomina Anatomica; Anatomic Nomenclature; ÇØºÎÇÐ ¸í¸í¹ý... |
| CBN | cannabinol; central benign neoplasm; Commission on Biological Nomenclature |
| ICNB | International Committee on Nomenclature of Bacteria |
| SNOMED | Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine |
|---|
| International Code of Zoological Nomenclature | <zoology> An Authoritative document containing a system of rules and recommendations to be followed in giving a scientific name to an animal or animal group. Adopted by the International Congresses of Zoology and Administered by the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature. The most recent version of the Code, adopted in principle by the 20th General Assembly of the International Union of Biological Sciences at Helsinki in 1979, was approved by the ICZN late in 1983. With minor exceptions it retains the same format as the first two editions. Minor amendments for immediate incorporation are published in Bulletin Zoological Nomenclature as Declarations to remain in force until ratified or rejected by future congresses. (09 Jan 1998) |
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| zoological | Of or pertaining to zoology, or the science of animals. Origin: Cf. F. Zoologique. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
| binary nomenclature | The system of nomenclature in which the names of species are composed of two parts, a generic name and a specific epithet (species name, in botany). Synonym: binary nomenclature, binomial nomenclature. Origin: Carl von Linne (05 Mar 2000) |
| binomial nomenclature | <biology, ecology> The system of having two names (genus and specific epithet, also called Latin binomial) for each organism. (09 Oct 1997) |
| Cleland nomenclature | A nomenclature for representing the binding mechanisms of enzyme-catalyzed reactions; in this nomenclature, substrates are represented by the letters A, B, C, etc., while products are represented by P, Q, R, etc., enzyme by E, and modified forms of the enzyme by F, G, etc.; in addition, the number of substrates or products is represented by uni, bi, ter, etc.; thus, an aminotransferase reaction (e.g., alanine transaminase) has a ping-pong bi bi mechanism; glutamine synthetase has been reported to have a random ter ter mechanism.subentries under mechanism. (05 Mar 2000) |
| nomenclature | <zoology> The description of new taxa or alterations to the concept of previously described taxa which involve changes in the names of taxa. (09 Jan 1998) |
| linnaean system of nomenclature | The system of nomenclature in which the names of species are composed of two parts, a generic name and a specific epithet (species name, in botany). Synonym: binary nomenclature, binomial nomenclature. Origin: Carl von Linne (05 Mar 2000) |
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