This question is too vague to answer: many different substances boil at many different degrees Celsius. In fact the same substance can be made to boil at different temperatures by changing the pressure acting on it.
Hydrogen, at normal atmospheric pressure, boils at -252.879 °C.
This is the Celsius scale, commonly used in the metric system for measuring temperature.
Water boils at 100 degrees Celsius and freezes at 0 degrees Celsius.
Water boils at 100 degrees Celsius at sea level. If water is boiling at 130 degrees Celsius, it might be due to the presence of impurities or changes in atmospheric pressure, which can affect the boiling point of water.
On the Celsius scale, pure water, at normal atmospheric pressure, freezes at 0 deg C and boils at 100 deg C.
Water boils at 100 degrees Celsius at standard atmospheric pressure.
It boils
Water boils at 100 degrees Celsius
Water boils at 100 degrees Celsius
Water boils at 100 degrees Celsius
At sea level water boils at 100 Celsius.
Water is a substance that boils at 100 degrees Celsius and freezes at 0 degrees Celsius.
Water boils at 100 degree Celsius
No! Water boils at 100oC, silly!
The Celsius scale.
100 degrees. It freezes at 0
Hydrogen, at normal atmospheric pressure, boils at -252.879 °C.