Some Latin scientific names have the suffix "inn". What does this mean? Can you omit it?

"inn." It is the international non-proprietary abbreviation of pharmacy 1 substance, which is used in the Latin names of plants, animals and mineral drugs used as raw materials of Chinese patent medicines, and generally cannot be omitted!

Latin words named after sequential elements in the world have a unified suffix. When you see the suffix, you can probably know which group you are studying.

At present, the adjustment of family and order is the most involved in the literature, so only these two suffixes are introduced.

Order: -I form

Suborder: ides

Palward:-Ida

Super family: idea

Section:-Section

Subsubfamily of subfamily:-Oryzainae

Tribe: -ini

At the level of genus, there is no fixed Latin suffix, so we can only rely on memory. For example, if you only know the genus name and the species is not clear, you can use spp as a suffix.