60 degrees Celsius is relatively hot. To get an idea of the Celsius system, consider that: 0 degrees Celsius is where water freezes 20-25 degrees Celsius is room temperature 37 degrees Celsius is body temperature 100 degrees Celsius is where water boils
18 degrees Celsius is 64.5 degrees Fahrenheit or 291 kelvin. Not cold.
Cold, but above freezing. Two degrees Celsius is 35.6 degrees Fahrenheit.
cold
That's fairly cold; colder than the freezing point of water.
-20 degrees Celsius = -4 degrees Fahrenheit.
4 degrees Celsius
4 degrees Celsius is equal to 39.2 degrees Fahrenheit. That's only ten degrees away from freezing.
14
Extremely cold; -89.2 degrees Celsius is -128.56 degrees Fahrenheit.
60 degrees Celsius is relatively hot. To get an idea of the Celsius system, consider that: 0 degrees Celsius is where water freezes 20-25 degrees Celsius is room temperature 37 degrees Celsius is body temperature 100 degrees Celsius is where water boils
125 degrees Celsius = 257 degrees Fahrenheit (hot, not cold).
Depends on what your definition of cold is. 20 degrees celsius is about 52 70 degrees fahrenheit. So it is about room temperature
-19 degrees Celsius = -2.2 degrees Fahrenheit. That would be really cold!
34 degrees Celsius is equal to 93.2 degrees Fahrenheit, so it is not cold at all.
"Cold" could mean anything. To me, cold might be 10 degrees Celsius, while someone else sees "cold" as 1 degree Celsius. In science, nothing is ever described as cold, because a questions that always arise are "how cold? 20 degrees Celsius? 0 degrees Celsius? -100 degrees Celsius?"
18 degrees Celsius is 64.5 degrees Fahrenheit or 291 kelvin. Not cold.