Since the location nor time of day are given, there can be no serious answer.
Since the location nor time of day are given, there can be no serious answer.
Assuming you are going from Celsius to Fahrenheit, it is 101.48 degrees F.
50 Fahrenheit is 10 degrees celsius. Quick conversion: Going form F to C = subtract 32 and divide by 1.8. Going from C to F = multiply by 1.8 and add 32.
Assuming you are going from Celsius to Fahrenheit, it is 101.48 degrees F.
It will be -2 degrees tomorrow. Twice as cold means subtracting the same temperature again, which in this case is 2 degrees.
The thermite reaction can approach or exceed 5000 degrees fahrenheit. Be careful if you are going to try this, because you cannot extinguish it once it starts.
What the :( it going to be snowing tomorrow!
The starting point is that 0 Celsius equals 32 Fahrenheit. One degree Celsius is of higher value than one degree Fahrenheit. So, going less than zero on centigrade, the rate of decrease on Celsius is less than the rate of dgress of Fahrenheit until it comes the point of -40 degrees Celsius when both scales match together.Mathematically,F = C x 9/5 +32Where F is degrees Fahrenheit and C degrees CelsiusAccordingly,-40 degrees Celsius = 32 - 40 x 9/5 = -40 degrees Fahrenheit
"tomorrow", an adverb of time.
The adverb is 'tomorrow' because it is describing the verb phrase, 'are going' (are going when?).
It says it will be 14 degrees Celsius with cloudy periods.
Yes, the question "Where are you going tomorrow?" is correct grammatically.