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.
Celsius. Virtually everyone in the world except for the USA does.
Texas is in the US where Fahrenheit is used by most people for everyday use.
The rest of the world besides US uses Celsius, so yes.
USA uses Fahrenheit, Great Britain uses Celsius
Physicists and Chemists use Kelvin. The Gas Laws, which deal with temperature, must use absolute temperature scales (Kelvin or Rankin). Most of the world's population, including most scientists, engineers etc, use Celsius. A few people who are resistant to a more integrated system of measurement use Fahrenheit.
Officially Celsius, though some people still think in Fahrenheit.
Celsius. Virtually everyone in the world except for the USA does.
Texas is in the US where Fahrenheit is used by most people for everyday use.
The rest of the world besides US uses Celsius, so yes.
Fahrenheit, just like the U.S.
Celsius and Fahrenheit are different scales; most countries use Celsius, a few countries use Fahrenheit instead.Celsius and Fahrenheit are different scales; most countries use Celsius, a few countries use Fahrenheit instead.Celsius and Fahrenheit are different scales; most countries use Celsius, a few countries use Fahrenheit instead.Celsius and Fahrenheit are different scales; most countries use Celsius, a few countries use Fahrenheit instead.
fahrenheit
Celsius
celcius, only America and 2 3rd world countries use Fahrenheit
To convert Celsius to Fahrenheit, use the formula: Fahrenheit (Celsius x 9/5) 32.
101.5 degrees Fahrenheit = 38.61 degrees Celsius.
Celsius makes better sense in chemistry, and the majority of the world uses it. I was brought up thinking in Fahrenheit degrees so I continue to use it. In conversations with friends around the world this causes confusion for me and my friends abroad. Starting to think in Celsius for younger people would be beneficial to them in the long run.