Every country in the world uses celsius except the USA.
Celsius and Fahrenheit are different scales; most countries use Celsius, a few countries use Fahrenheit instead.Celsius and Fahrenheit are different scales; most countries use Celsius, a few countries use Fahrenheit instead.Celsius and Fahrenheit are different scales; most countries use Celsius, a few countries use Fahrenheit instead.Celsius and Fahrenheit are different scales; most countries use Celsius, a few countries use Fahrenheit instead.
Countries that use Celsius use it in their ovens.
buna, aushawitz
That is a wrong question, because all countries use degrees Celsius, except the USA. Even Great Britain stopped using degrees Fahrenheit and use now degrees Celsius.
USA uses Fahrenheit, Great Britain uses Celsius
Celsius
USA
Fahrenheit is used in the Bahamas, Belize, the Cayman Islands, Palau, and the United States and associated territories of American Samoa and the U.S. Virgin Islands for everyday applications (although Puerto Rico and Guam, use Celsius alongside Fahrenheit as well). Everyone else uses Celsius.
The Fahrenheit scale was the primary temperature standard for climatic, industrial and medical purposes in most English-speaking countries until the 1960s. In the late 1960s and 1970s, the Celsius (formerly Centigrade) scale was adopted by most of these countries as part of the standardizing process called metrication (or metrification). Only in the United States and a few other countries (such as Belize) does the Fahrenheit system continue to be used, and only for non-scientific use. Most other countries have adopted Celsius as the primary scale in all use.
United States is the ONLY country that uses Fahrenheit all the rest use Celsius.
Kelvin and Celsius are both units used to measure temperature. Celsius is typically used in countries that use the metric system. Kelvin is used in a scientific or academic setting, because it's scale is more precise than Celsius.
All of them.