101.3 Fahrenheit.
It is 98.6 degrees fahrenheit.
12 Fahrenheit is cooler. This is because 0 Celsius is 32 Fahrenheit. Also, -40 Celsius = -40 Fahrenheit.
106.16 degrees Fahrenheit.
It is 80.6 degrees Fahrenheit
Fahrenheit
The English scale for temperature is "Fahrenheit" (°F).
If by English you mean American then yes, in London I believe they use Celsius.
The Fahrenheit scale (named for Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit) was used in the English system of measurement, until generally replaced by the Celsius (centigrade) scale. Fahrenheit is still used in the US, but almost exclusively for: - public weather statements (air temperatures and dew points) - body temperatures - oven temperatures
Ray Bradbury wrote Fahrenheit 451, and published it in 1953. It was originally a short story written by Bradbury in 1951 called the 'Fireman' before it was expanded to novel length by the famous science fiction author.
United States cooking temperatures are usually rated in Fahrenheit.
yes.
In the English system, temperature is commonly measured in degrees Fahrenheit (°F). In the metric system, temperature is typically measured in degrees Celsius (°C).
The spelling is "Fahrenheit", an English temperature scale, while "Celsius" is the metric scale. The measurements are not "opposite", merely on a different scale.
Well, English is a pretty broad term. But I assume you mean British because of "England". The British way of mesuring temperature is the same as Canadians, measured in Celsius. But just incase you meant the American way of measuring temperature, that would be in Fahrenheit.
The Fahrenheit scale was traditionally used in the English system of measurement until largely supplanted by the Celsius scale. Measurements in the Fahrenheit scale are generally used only in the US, almost exclusively for air temperatures, body temperatures, and oven temperatures.Another scale that uses English degree units is the Rankine scale, which is based on absolute zero.
That is the correct spelling of the proper noun Fahrenheit, a temperature scale originated around 1724 by German physicist Daniel Fahrenheit (1686-1736).Fahrenheit is an English scale still widely used in the US, despite the adoption of the Celsius (centigrade) for most scientific uses. This is mainly due to its commercial use in cooking appliances and for weather observations.The temperature scale is Fahrenheit, named for scientist Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit.The temperature scale is spelled Fahrenheit (after Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit).