A precise nomenclature and terminology is the foundation of communication in Anatomy and related biomedical sciences. The olfactory bulbs and nerves lie above and below the cribriform plate (CP), respectively. Hence, many anatomical landmarks in this region have names adopting the term "olfactory" as qualifiers. Ambiguous use of these "olfactory" terms exists, with some potential repercussions on patient treatments. We performed a publication database analysis to determine the frequency of misuse of names for seven anatomical "olfactory" spaces close to the CP and nasal cavity. We searched PubMed ® publications having the keyword "olfactory" in their title or abstract, plus one of seven other keywords: "groove", "fossa", "recess", "cleft", "vestibule", "sulcus", and "cistern". We reviewed all abstracts for accuracy of these terms relative to accepted norms or customary definitions. By February 2020, we found all these keywords in 1255 articles. For the terms olfactory "groove" and "fossa", the number of relevant articles (and percentage of those inaccurately using these terms) were 374 (1.1%), and 49 (8.2%), respectively. All 52 abstracts containing "olfactory" and "vestibule" were irrelevant, relating to the "nasal vestibule" and olfactory function, instead of "olfactory vestibule". Overall, terms used to describe "olfactory" spaces near the CP are seldom ambiguous or inaccurate, but the terms olfactory "groove" and "fossa" are occasionally misused, We propose several new "olfactory" terms for inclusion in the Terminologia Anatomica, and stress the need for uniform nomenclature leading to greater consistency and accuracy in clinical use of anatomical terms containing the word "olfactory" as a descriptor.anatomic landmarks, anterior cranial fossa, ethmoid bone, nasal cavity, turbinates 1 | INTRODUCTION Nomenclature provides a system of names or terms, as well as the rules for forming these names in a particular field. The importance of standard nomenclature is understandable and clear-it is to facilitate communication (Neumann et al., 2020); and this should apply to all scientific disciplines. For instance, regarding errors in chemical nomenclature, Eller (2006) has stated, "… it seems to be tedious and unacceptable for any reader to waste his time with futile or even misleading names".Terminologia Anatomica (TA) is the international standard on human anatomical terminology, containing the terms for about 7500 human gross anatomic structures (Kachlik et al., 2008). In Anatomy, This paper has not been published and it is not under consideration for publication elsewhere.