Yes.
35 deg C. A Celsius degree is bigger than a Fahrenheit degree.
35 deg C. A Celsius degree is bigger than a Fahrenheit degree.
1 degree C is a bigger change. It's 1.8 times the size of a change of 1 degree F. (Technically, these are changes in temperature, not heat. There's a difference.)
23 is a bigger number than 10.If you want to talk about temperature, there's really no such thing as'bigger' or 'smaller' temperatures.10°C is a 'warmer' temperature, or a 'higher'temperature, than 23°F.But please, not a 'bigger' one.
No. A hunder degrees C spans the same range as 180 degrees F. So a C degree is 1.8 times as large as a F degree.
285 deg F = 140.55... deg C
No, one degree Celsius is not smaller than one degree Fahrenheit. One degree Celsius is equal to 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit.
They are not. For example, -60 deg C = -76 deg F so the F is smaller. It is true in the range that is used in normal circumstances and that is because of two reasons: one is that the 0 of the Fahrenheit scale is lower [0 deg F = -17.77... deg C]. The other reason is that each Fahrenheit degree is smaller than the Celsius degree so that the F numbers increase more rapidly. The two scales are the same at -40 degrees. And below that the C number is bigger than the F number.
C to F.. Multiply by 1.8 then add 32. F to C.. Subtract 32 then divide by 1.8
°F to °C: [°C] = ([°F] − 32) × 5⁄9°C to °F: [°F] = [°C] × 1.8 + 32
59 degrees F
F = C × 9/5 + 32 C = (F - 32) x 5/9