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.
Yes, a higher number in Celsius indicates a higher temperature compared to a lower Celsius number. Temperatures are measured using a scale where zero degrees is the freezing point of water and 100 degrees is the boiling point of water.
Shaft
20 Celsius is colder than 25 Celsius. The higher the number in degrees Celsius, the warmer the temperature.
15 Celsius is wamrmer because the number is greater and on the thermometer the bigger the numbers the high the heat
Numbers have no end. There is an infinite number of numbers. They never stop going higher and higher.
Neither. Given any signed number it is possible to find a higher natural number and given any natural number it is possible to find a higher signed number.
No, there is no highest number. For every number there are infinitely more numbers that are higher.
7 degrees Celsius is warmer than 3.5 degrees Celsius.
higher numbers are very high.
A composite number. No even numbers higher than 2 are prime numbers.
Any time the Fahrenheit temperature is below (minus 40), the Celsius number for the same temperature is higher.
In Fahrenheit, higher numbers represent hotter temperatures.