Yes. Water boils at a given temperature (depending on pressure) regardless of how it is measured. It is true that a Fahrenheit degree is not equal to a Celsius degree, but 212 °F is the same as 100 °C. They're the same temperature, the same amount of "hotness" or "heatedness" as each other.
Here's an experiment. Two pots of water are put on two adjacent burners of a stove and brought to a boil. Doesn't it make sense that the water in either pot is as hot as the water in the other? If the temperature of one pot is measured with a Fahrenheit thermometer, and the other with a thermometer that reads in degrees Centigrade, the temperatures are different, but that's because of the different scales of the thermometers. The water in one pot is just as hot as the water in the other.
212 F is boiling
boiling in Fahrenheit is 212 degrees
100 degrees C is boiling .
The water boils at 100 degrees Celsius. That would be 212 in Fahrenheit and 372.15 in Kelvin.
100 oC is the boiling point of water at 1 atmosphere pressure.
Yes it is just a few degrees short of the boiling point of water, 200 degrees Fahrenheit = 93.33 degrees Celsius
Celsius is based on the freezing point and boiling point of water so if it is 0 Celsius than it is the freezing point of water and if it is 100 Celsius than it is the boiling point of water On the other hand Fahrenheit is based on how hot and how cold it got in Germany that year...I know bad right?
The temperature of boiling water is 212 degrees Fahrenheit. This is 100 degrees Celsius. Water will freeze at 32 degrees Fahrenheit (0 degrees Celsius).
Hot, water on 100 degree Celsius is boiling
hot :) very hot. in Fahrenheit its warm in Celsius, its boiling!
It is 3 times hotter than the boiling point of water, it is 572 degrees Fahrenheit and 573 degrees Kelvin.
32 degree Fahrenheit.
Celsius is based on the freezing point and boiling point of water so if it is 0 Celsius than it is the freezing point of water and if it is 100 Celsius than it is the boiling point of water On the other hand Fahrenheit is based on how hot and how cold it got in Germany that year...I know bad right?
pretty hot it is 50 degrees Celsius higher then boiling water
The temperature of the boiling point of water is the same, whatever scale you use to measure it - they are all equally hot.