It's not. The sine of 32 degrees is approximately 0.53.
The sine of 59 degrees is approximately 0.86.
For a definition of sine, see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trigonometric_function .
32 degrees Celsius is greater than 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
No, they are the same temperature.
Yes.
It is an obtuse angle because it is greater than 90 but less than 180 degrees
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32 degrees Fahrenheit is colder than 32 degrees Celsius. This is because the Fahrenheit scale has smaller degree intervals than the Celsius scale, so a degree change in Fahrenheit represents a greater temperature change compared to Celsius. In this case, 32 degrees Fahrenheit is equivalent to 0 degrees Celsius, so it is colder than 32 degrees Celsius.
-10 C = 32 + -10 x 9/5 = 32 - 18 = 14 F greater than 10 F
The same.
32 yards is greater. Yards are 36 times greater than inches.
Of course 10 degrees Celsius is greater 10 C = 32 + 10 x 9/5 F = 32 + 18 F = 50 F
Any other number is "greater or less than" it.
Converting both to the same scale we'll see that 0 °F = -17.77 °C that makes 0 degrees Fahrenheit cooler than 0 degrees Celsius