23 degrees Celsius
This is not very precise. Different sources will cite different numbers for their "room temperature". In general, though, room temperature is in the neighborhood of 20-25°C (68-77 °F): comfortable enough for an average person in everyday clothing.
People can be comfortable in a wide range of temperatures.... the ability to change clothing allows the comfortable temperature range to be extended.High humidity can inhibit the body's natural cooling mechanisms and make some warm temperatures uncomfortable that would otherwise be ok with lower humidity.Likewise, high wind can increase cooling which can help at high temperatures, but be uncomfortable at lower temperatures.It is also possible to adapt somewhat seasonally as well as adapting to the locale. It can actually be uncomfortable to go from a non-climate controlled area to a climate controlled area (or visa-versa).A person's activity, or lack of activity also makes a difference.A good estimate is that people can be comfortable from about 60°F to about 85°F.Going out skiing with heavy clothing, some activity, a nice sunny day, and not too bad of wind, one might be very comfortable with temperatures somewhat below freezing.Plunging into 50°F water, however, could be life threatening without the proper protection.The low 90's might not be bad outside, shaded, on a nice breezy summer day.
It's not.
it is 17*C for any person who doesn't know
yes - close to boiling!
try looking at cryoglobulinemia
Urine is the same temperature as the body it leaves. If the person has a fever, the urine will be a higher temperature. This is why there is a temperature gauge on the outside of a sample bottle.
The answer depends on the context. A hot drink, for example, is enjoyable at that temperature but you would not be comfortable if the air temperature hit 59.4 deg C.
Great Danes have very thin coats, so they do not like cold weather. If it's comfortable for a person, it's comfortable for a Great Dane. In cold weather they really do need a coat to help them keep warm, just like a person.
8 glasses a day should be perfect for the average person that's about 2 measuring cups per glass it varys on what temperature it is outside.
For shock; yes keep them comfortable along with maintain normal body temperature, control any bleeding, if possible elevate legs 12 inches, reassure victim, splint any dislocations or breaks, and give O2 if you are trained & it is available.
That is a personnel preference. What one person thinks is comfortable you may not.
Human bodies generate about 60 W of heat, even when we're just hanging out. We need to be able to dump this heat outside ourselves or we'd slowly overheat. 37.5 is the core temperature, the skin temperature is much lower. Once the ambient temperature begin to close in on our skin temperature it starts being harder for us to lose heat to the outside, and once ambient temperature reaches or surpasses the core temperature it becomes very hard indeed for us to lose any heat to the outside. ANd when we can't shed heat at the required rate anymore we feel warm.
This is not very precise. Different sources will cite different numbers for their "room temperature". In general, though, room temperature is in the neighborhood of 20-25°C (68-77 °F): comfortable enough for an average person in everyday clothing.
"Is that sweater comfortable?" Asked Jean's mother. Our furnishings are the most comfortable brands! The spokes person boomed.
http://www.ehow.com/how_4663820_tell-have-frostbite.html
The emotion meaning of cozy is feeling warm, comfortable, and safe, often associated with a sense of contentment and relaxation. It can evoke feelings of intimacy and being sheltered from external stress or discomfort.