-4
I wouldn't call either of those temperatures 'hot', but -28°C is
more negative than -24°C is, so it's the less hot one.
Yes, but not at atmospheric pressure (which is the pressure of your kitchen). Steam can be hotter than 100 degrees celsius under pressures higher than this.
Colder
-6 degrees Celsius is colder; it is farther from zero than -4 degrees.
You write 'two degrees Celsius'. If you have more than one, "degrees" is plural.
The much hotter planet is Saturn. Saturn's average surface temperature is about 40 degrees Celsius above that of Neptune.
1 degree Fahrenheit is -17.22 degrees Celsius. 1 degree Celsius is 33.8 degrees Fahrenheit. It seems that 1 degree Celsius is hotter.
-183 degrees Celsius is hotter than -193C by 10 degrees.
80 degrees Celsius is hotter than 20 degrees Celsius. (Higher positive numbers are hotter temperatures on all modern scales.)
Degrees Celsius are always 'hotter' than degrees Fahrenheit: 100ºC = 212.00ºF
Yes.
Answer is 10 degree celsius. Use this method to get the answers. Start by subtracting 32 from 50 .Then multiply the answer with 5 and divide by 9. In this case the answer is 10 degree celsius.
97 degrees Celsius is hotter than 97 degrees Fahrenheit.
50 is much hotter in Celsius than Fahrenheit.
No, its colder. Water freezes at 32 degrees Fahrenheit and 0 degrees Celsius, so 5 degrees Celsius would be hotter.
Above -40 degrees, a number in Celsius is hotter than the same number in Fahrenheit.
Since Celsius degrees are larger than Fahrenheit degrees, above -40 degrees (where the scales coincide) any number in Celsius will be hotter than the corresponding number in Fahrenheit.
50 C is hotter than 50 F.Minus 40 C and minus 40 F are the same temperature.Below minus 40, any C is colder than the same F.Above minus 40, any C is hotter than the same F.