Wiki User
∙ 7y agoYou write 'two degrees Celsius'. If you have more than one, "degrees" is plural.
Wiki User
∙ 7y agoStart by multiplying 32 with 9 and divide by 5. Then add 32 to the answer. In this case the answer is 89.6 degree Fahrenheit .
The expression "degrees Celsius" is a temperature, such as 10 °C that represents the coolness or warmth of a physical object, body, or gas.The expression "Celsius degrees" refers to an interval between two measured temperatures. There are 100 Celsius degrees between water's freezing temperature 0°C and its boiling temperature 100°C.So while the first indicates a specific measurement, the second indicates a difference between temperatures, a corresponding gain or loss of heat energy.Celsius and Fahrenheit "degrees"Note that Celsius "degrees" are not the same size as Fahrenheit "degrees" : the two scales use the same term to represent very different intervals. Each "degree" on the Celsius scale is 1.8 times as large as a "degree" interval in Fahrenheit. There are 180 Fahrenheit degrees between the freezing and boiling points of water (32°F and 212°F).
No. Although the starting points of the two temperature scales are separated by 32 "degrees", the "degrees" are also different sizes in Celsius and in Fahrenheit.Celsius "degrees" are 1.8 times as large as Fahrenheit degrees.The conversion formulas are Fahrenheit temperature = (9/5 x Celsius temperature)+ 32and Celsius temperature = 5/9 x (Fahrenheit temperature - 32).Using the top formula (from C to F), we find that 32 °C is equal to 89.6 °F
the base unit of temperature is in Celsius and FahrenheitKelvin is the official unit for temperature but it is only used in science.Kelvin can be converted to Celsius by subtracting 273. Example: 273 K = 0 oC; 25 oC = 298 KFahrenheit can be calculated from Celsius by the following formula:F = C x 9/5 + 32 ORC = (F - 32) x 5/9The degrees in Kelvin and Celsius are the same size but Fahrenheit is not directly proportional.The two basic units for measuring temperature are Fahrenheit (named after Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit) and Celsius (named for Anders Celsius). Celsius was originally called Centigrade because the temperature range between freezing boiling water was split into 100 points called degrees where the freezing point of water was 0 degrees and the boiling point of water was 100 degrees.With Fahrenheit the freezing point is 32 degrees and the boiling point is 212 degrees. Working mathematically, a degree Fahrenheit is equivalent to 5/9 degrees Celsius.There is also another temperature scale called the Kelvin scale. It starts with 0 degrees at absolute zero. Absolute zero means there is no heat at all to measure. zero degrees Kelvin is equivalent to −273.15 degree Celsius or −459.67 degree Fahrenheit. The name Kelvin has nothing to do with the Kelvin timeline associated with a well known reboot of a science fiction space travel movie.
140°F = 60°C You can convert between these two here: http://www.wbuf.noaa.gov/tempfc.htm
Since it's more than one degree, it's plural, therefore it would be "degrees". If it were one degree, then you would say "one degree Celsius".
degree Celsius and degree Fahrenheit
Water freezes at 32 degrees Fahrenheit. It freezes at 0 degrees Celsius Water boils at 212 degrees Fahrenheit. It boils at 100 degrees Celsius. So, one degree Celsius it roughly two degrees Fahrenheit.
There are two reasons for this. The first is that a Fahrenheit degree is smaller than a Celsius degree. Four Celsius degrees is the same size as nine Fahrenheit degrees. The second reason is that 32 degrees Fahrenheit is zero degrees Celsius. If you put those two ideas together you figure out that -40°F = -40°C.
Thirty two degrees Fahrenheit is colder than five degrees Celsius. Five degrees Celsius is equal to 41 degree Fahrenheit. Zero degrees Celsius is equal to 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
Temperature is measured in degrees. There two generally used types of degrees, degrees Fahrenheit and degrees Celsius. One Fahrenheit degree equals 1.8 Celsius degrees.
It is 37 degree celsius Your body temperature for Celsius is 37 degrees Celsius.
It depends on what you're trying to say. If you're saying a temperature or a range, you write the degree symbol first; however, if you're saying a difference in temperature, you write the Celsius first and then the degrees. This is why- Describing a temperature involves a state of being, whereas a the difference in temperature is a comparison. Consider just writing it out: degrees Celsius or Celsius degrees. Celsius degrees sounds more like countable units because the noun (degrees) is at the end. On the other hand, degrees Celsius sounds more of a singular state. A range might give you the impression of a comparison, but it's really just two singular states. Sorry I'm rushing through this, I have a paper to do.
It is: 5/9*(18-32) = -7.78 degrees Celsius rounded to two decimal places
A degree Celsius, although it has the same name, is equal to 1.8 degrees on the Fahrenheit scale. You can see that for the freezing and boiling points of water, there are 100 Celsius degrees (100-0) between the two temperatures, while there are 180 (212-32) of the smaller fahrenheit degrees.
The difference between those same two points is 100 degrees Celcius, so 180 degrees F = 100 degrees C, or 1 degree F = 5/9 degrees C.
There are 100 Celsius "degrees" between the freezing and boiling points of water (0°C and 100°C). There are 180 Fahrenheit "degrees" between the freezing and boiling points of water (32°F and 212°F). This means that each Fahrenheit degree is a smaller interval, 100/180 or 5/9 the size of a Celsius degree. A Celsius degree is 9/5 (1.8) times as large as a Fahrenheit degree. This is why the differences between two temperatures is a smaller value when they are expressed in Celsius.