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Fahrenheit is now only used in the USA, Belize and Jamaica. In the UK the unofficial benchmark summer temperature however is 100 Fahrenheit but other than that the standard in Celsius.Celsius is the standard for the rest of the world. Except in certain scientific fields such as astronomy the Kelvin scale is used.
Temperature in cold areas are negative. Below sea level is negative altitude. Degrees left on the world coordinates.
Mr Fahrenheit decided the world needed a temperature scale that went from the lowest temperature generally experienced, (which he called "0") to about blood temperature which he called (with a small error) "100". On that scale the boiling point of water turns out to be 212 degrees. Mr Celsius decide that making the freezing point of water 0, and boiling point of water 100 would be better. There are other temperature scales too.
False. The rules and objects of geometry do really match the everyday world.
Yes, the rules and objects of geometry are designed to match the everyday world as much as possible.
Celsius. Most of the world except the US uses celsius.
Celsius is the temperature scale that is used in most of the world.
Everybody in the world uses for temperature degrees Celsius, except the USA.
The Centigrade scale, a.k.a. the Celsius scale.
Celsius
It's the temperature scale standard for most of the world.
The Fahrenheit scale is the temperature scale most familiar to most people in the US. However for the rest of the world, the Celsius scale is the one that is most familiar.
Most of the world now uses the Celsius scale where the boiling point of water is 100 degrees Celsius.
Most of the world uses the Celsius (or centigrade) scale where the temperature range between freezing water and boiling water is split into 100 degrees going from zero to one hundred degrees.
commonly used? well fahrenheit and celsius/centigrade(same thing) for weather temperature. Then there is kelvin used in technical/scientific situations and thats about it for common usage so 3 is the answer. There are up to seven different temperature scales but only 3 are used commonly
Celsius is a measurement of temperature named after its initiator, Swedish astronomer Anders Celsius. He devised a temperature scale in which the freezing point of water was called zero degrees, its boiling point one hundred degrees. His temperature scale is standard in most countries of the world, with the USA most prominently still using Fahrenheit's temperature scale. Celsius is an adjective and a proper noun.
The scale we use for temperature is "degrees" (°). There are three temperature scales that are used today. The Kelvin (K) scale is used by scientists and for astronomical temperatures. The Celsius scale (°C) is used in most of the world to measure air temperatures. In the United States, the Fahrenheit scale(°F) is used to measure temperatures at or near the surface.