Forming epithets honouring persons
       
       Epithets are names used at the species, subspecies, varietal and forma levels. 
       If they are adjectives they are declinable; if they are nouns in apposition they are  not declinable. Epithets honouring persons can be adjectival and declinable (e.g. agardianus, agardhiana, agardhianum; i.e. masculine, feminine and neuter, and agreeing with the gender of the genus name). 
       Generally, however, epithets honouring people are proposed as nouns in the genitive case (singular or plural) and do not change with the gender of the genus name (e.g., agardhii, agardhiorum, abbottiae, abbottiorum or abbottiarum). Errors in the formation of epithets are correctable under the current ICN rules (Art. 60).
       The key below is intended to help authors to form epithets correctly.
       1a. Epithet is an adjective:  
    
        
        1b. Epithet is a noun in the genitive case:  
  7a. Personal name ends in a consonant (but not -er):  
  
    8a. One person is being honoured:  
    
      9a. Person is male: add -ii 
      9b. Person is female: add -iae
      
    8b. Two or more people are being honoured:  
    
      10a. At least one person is male: add -iorum
      10b. All people are female: add -iarum
      
    
          7b. Personal name ends in a vowel or -er:  
  
    11a. Personal name ends in -a:  
    
      12a. One person is being honoured (male or female): add -e
      12b. Two or more people are being honoured (male or female): add -rum
      
    11b. Personal name ends in -e, -er, -i, -o, -u, or -y:  
    
      13a. One person is being honoured:  
      
        14a. Person is male: add -i
        14b. Person is female: add -ae
        
      13b. Two or more people are being honoured:  
      
        15a. At least one person is male: add -orum
        15b. All people are female: add -arum
    
      
    
    
  
Modified from "
The Code Decoded" by N. Turland. Image: Botanists at work. From 
Drawings of the Rembrandt School, Vol. 3, Werner Sumowski by  Gerbrand van den Eeckhout.