No, its colder. Water freezes at 32 degrees Fahrenheit and 0 degrees Celsius, so 5 degrees Celsius would be hotter.
Degrees Celsius are always 'hotter' than degrees Fahrenheit: 100ºC = 212.00ºF
97 degrees Celsius is hotter than 97 degrees Fahrenheit.
Since Celsius degrees are larger than Fahrenheit degrees, above -40 degrees (where the scales coincide) any number in Celsius will be hotter than the corresponding number in Fahrenheit.
80 degrees Celsius is hotter than 20 degrees Celsius. (Higher positive numbers are hotter temperatures on all modern scales.)
No. For temperatures, 45°C is much hotter than 45°F (equal to 7.22°C). Likewise, a change in temperature of 45 "degrees" on the Celsius scale is a much larger change than 45 "degrees" on the Fahrenheit scale. The Fahrenheit "degrees" are smaller intervals. Technically the numbers have the same value, but on different scales.
Degrees Celsius are always 'hotter' than degrees Fahrenheit: 100ºC = 212.00ºF
50 is much hotter in Celsius than Fahrenheit.
97 degrees Celsius is hotter than 97 degrees Fahrenheit.
No, is Celsius is hotter than 92 degrees Fahrenheit
Since Celsius degrees are larger than Fahrenheit degrees, above -40 degrees (where the scales coincide) any number in Celsius will be hotter than the corresponding number in Fahrenheit.
50 C is hotter than 50 F.Minus 40 C and minus 40 F are the same temperature.Below minus 40, any C is colder than the same F.Above minus 40, any C is hotter than the same F.
1 degree Fahrenheit is -17.22 degrees Celsius. 1 degree Celsius is 33.8 degrees Fahrenheit. It seems that 1 degree Celsius is hotter.
Above -40 degrees, a number in Celsius is hotter than the same number in Fahrenheit.
Yes because 50 degrees Celsius is equivalent to 122 degrees Fahrenheit
Colder
Yes because 100 degrees Celsius is equal to 212 degrees Fahrenheit. If your not quite sure still, just google Fahrenheit to Celsius converter.
Neither. German scientist Daniel Fahrenheit measured the temperature of the coldest concoction he could produce, and called that temperature 'zero'. The Swedish scientist Anders Celsius took the freezing point of water and called that'zero'.Mr. Fahrenheit's concoction was much colder than the freezing temperature of water, so his zero is much lower than Mr. Celsius' zero. That is why zero Celsius equals 32 degrees Fahrenheit. The temperature measured is in reality of course the same , but in Fahrenheit's scale it is indicated by a higher number.