Let's see.
Temperature Fahrenheit = Temperature Celcius(1.80) + 32
1 degree F = Tc(1.80) + 32
- 31 = Tc(1.80)
= - 17.2 degrees Celsius
Guess you can say 1 Fahrenheit is more than - 17.2 Celsius
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32 degrees Fahrenheit = 0 degrees celsius. Therefore 0 Fahrenheit is less than 0 celsius, and is colder.
1 Fahrenheit degree = 5/9 of one Celsius degrees 1 Celsius degree = 1.8 Fahrenheit degree There is no constant ratio between the °F and °C numbers for the same temperature, because their zeros are at different temperatures. A Celsius number less than -40° is colder than the same Fahrenheit number. A Celsius number more than -40° is warmer than the same Fahrenheit number. And -40° is the same actual temperature in both °F and °C.
It is the same and both temperatures indicate the freezing point of water.
No. They are units of temperature. A value in Fahrenheit has an equivalent value in Celsius.
Not sure what you are asking unless you meant the opposite. 0 in Celsius is +32 in Fahrenheit = freezing 100 in Celsius is 212 in Fahrenheit = boiling point.