The answer will depend on the ambient temperature, wind chill, whether the body is dry, whether it is clothed.
It all depends on where the body is located, season, the condition of the body. There are multiple factors that go into it.
A normal body temperature is 37 degrees Celsius or 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit. A body temperature of 50 degrees Celsius is 13 degrees hotter than a normal body temperature. If your body temperature were to reach 50 degrees Celsius you be dead.
65 degrees Celsius - you'd be dead 65 degrees Fahrenheit - pretty warm
At 80 degrees Celsius, most (not all) life forms would be dead.
They'd be dead.
no...if they did they would be dead for sure.
dead
then you dead
Because they don't go that high. Water boils at 100 degrees Celsius. Body temperature is 37 degrees Celsius, so there's no need for a clinical thermometer to cover a range much higher than expected for body temperature; they might need to go up to say 45 tops (and if someone has a body temperature of 45 degrees Celcius, they're either dead or dying).
if your talking about 36.5 degrees Fahrenheit, they you would be dead because your temperature cannot go that low without killing you. if you are talking about Celsius which is about 97.7 degrees Fahrenheit. My opinion is no you are not sick. The normal temperature is 98.6 Fahrenheit and 37 degrees Celsius.
Once the human body has died, it will remain its average temperature of 37 degrees celcius for approximately one hour. For every degree dropped below 37, the human body is judged to have been dead for another hour.
100 degrees What? If Celsius then forget about coping because you are dead. If Fahrenheit then have a cool bath or shower, go for a swim, put on a fan etc. If Kelvin then forget it...you're dead.
You're dead