No, as 20 degrees Celsius is about normal room temperature. Temperature Fahrenheit = Temperature Celsius(1.80) + 32
Assuming you mean 10 °C higher... 3 °C (or +3 °C) is 10° higher than -7 °C
1.2 - 6.5 = -5.3 degrees
0 degrees Celsius is a colder temperature than 40 degrees Celsius. 0 degrees Celsius is the freezing level for water. Any positive number above 0 degrees Celsius is a warmer temperature.
3 -10 = -7 Celsius
Yes, a temperature of 68 degrees Fahrenheit is 20 degrees higher than the equivalent temperature in Celsius, which is 20 degrees Celsius.
It is 28 degrees Celsius that is higher than 25 degrees Celsius
10 degrees higher than -6 degrees Celsius is 4 degrees Celsius.
The temperature inside the house is 31 degrees higher than the outside temperature.
10 degrees Celsius would feel warmer because it is a higher temperature than 10 degrees Fahrenheit. The Celsius scale starts at a lower baseline temperature than the Fahrenheit scale, so the same numerical value on the Celsius scale represents a higher temperature than on the Fahrenheit scale.
In terms of numbers, the same temperature will appear higher in Fahrenheit than in Celsius. For example, a temperature of 100 degrees Fahrenheit is hotter than 37.8 degrees Celsius.
That's correct. In the Fahrenheit and Celsius temperature scales, a given temperature in Fahrenheit will be higher than the equivalent temperature in Celsius. For example, 50 degrees Fahrenheit is a higher temperature than 10 degrees Celsius.
16 + 10 = 26 degrees Celsius. Which is 78.8 Fahrenheit.
65 degrees Celsius is higher than 65 degrees Fahrenheit.
Yes, 16 degrees Celsius is colder than 19 degrees Celsius as the higher the temperature value, the warmer it is.
Yes, -8 degrees Celsius is lower than -1 degree Celsius. The higher the negative value, the lower the temperature.
No, 139 degrees Celsius is quite hot. Water boils at 100 degrees Celsius, so a temperature of 139 degrees Celsius would be much higher than room temperature.