If by English you mean American then yes, in London I believe they use Celsius.
In English the unit of temperature if Fahrenheit shown as F°. In Metric the unit is Celsius shown as C°.
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.
Yes, Texas uses Fahrenheit as its primary unit of temperature measurement. This is consistent with the United States, where Fahrenheit is the standard unit of temperature.
The Fahrenheit temperature scaled was based on a proposal made by Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit in 1724.
Fahrenheit
In the US, temperature is typically measured in degrees Fahrenheit (°F).
There are Fahrenheit, Celsius, and Kelvin.
Fahrenheit
Percent is not a unit of temperature.
Degrees Fahrenheit or Celsius.
In temperature, 'f' indicates degrees Fahrenheit, a unit of temperature measurement commonly used in the United States.
Temperature is used to measure with degree Fahrenheit. Other unit is celsius.