No. Fahrenheit to Celsius is figured out by this equation: C=(F-32) x 5/9 AND Celsius to Fahrenheit uses this equation: F=(9/5 x C) + 32
No, 1 degree Fahrenheit = -17.22 degrees Celsius
10 degrees Celsius because that is 10 degrees warmer than the freezing temperature (which is 0 degrees Celsius) where as Fahrenheit would be 23 degrees colder than the freezing temperature (which is 32 degrees Fahrenheit)
-3.5
A degree in the Celsius scale is larger than one in the Fahrenheit scale.
No. 37° F is the same temperature as 2.7° C. 37° C is the same temperature as 98.6° F. For any number above -40, the Celsius is warmer than the Fahrenheit. For any number below -40, the Celsius is cooler than the Fahrenheit.
What temperature is 4 degrees Celsius warmer than -1
240
10 degrees Celsius is much warmer 50 degrees Fahrenheit
109 degrees Fahrenheit is equivalent to 42.78 degrees Celsius which is warmer than 35 degrees Celsius.
30
14 degrees Celsius is warmer than 14 degrees Fahrenheit: 14ºC = 57.2ºF
Answer: No 50 Celsius = 32 + 50 x 9/5 Fahrenheit = 32 + 90 F = 123 Fahrenheit So, 50 Celsius is warmer than 95 Fahrenheit
No, it is not.
No. They are units of temperature. A value in Fahrenheit has an equivalent value in Celsius.
At -40 degrees, Celsius and Fahrenheit are equal. Warmer than that, and Fahrenheit will have the bigger number than Celsius. Cooler than -40 and Celsius will have a bigger number than Fahrenheit.
1 Fahrenheit degree = 5/9 of one Celsius degrees 1 Celsius degree = 1.8 Fahrenheit degree There is no constant ratio between the °F and °C numbers for the same temperature, because their zeros are at different temperatures. A Celsius number less than -40° is colder than the same Fahrenheit number. A Celsius number more than -40° is warmer than the same Fahrenheit number. And -40° is the same actual temperature in both °F and °C.
1 degree Fahrenheit is -17.22 degrees Celsius. 1 degree Celsius is 33.8 degrees Fahrenheit. It seems that 1 degree Celsius is hotter.
I suggest you convert each of the Fahrenheit temperatures to Celsius (or the other way round, each of the Celsius temperatures to Fahrenheit), and then compare.