Perhaps about 75 or 80 degrees
Lukewarm is generally around body heat. ≈ 36 oC or 98 oF
The swimming pool's water was lukewarm.
Tepid can also be considered "lukewarm", which is room temperature (or slightly above): 23 C or 73 F
No, as both the temperatures are the same, you will get only 2 cups, each 50 degrees. You have to heat the cup to get 100 degree.
Depends on the temperature of the ice.
moderately warm; lukewarm; a comfortable temperature range is 26 EC to 35 EC; the tepid temperature must be maintained for the duration by an in-line temperature control valve that should prevent scalding.
There is no specific temperature. Lukewarm typically means neutral in temperature to the skin.
Water is lukewarm when it is slightly above your temperature, about 100-105 degrees F.
The warmer of the two would be hot water. Tepid water is nearly body temperature, so it is considered lukewarm. That means that hot water is hotter than lukewarm water.
"Lukewarm" is a non-specific term, but if we consider room temperature to be 70 degrees, and bath water temperature to be 110 degrees, that is a 40 degree difference. Lukewarm should be about halfway between those two points. That would be 90 degrees, or about the same temperature as the average human's skin. So water on the skin at that temperature would feel "just a little bit warm". Which is what lukewarm means.
make sure the water is lukewarm to the touch. Do not use hot or cold water
Body temperature is about 98oF or 36oC, so 71oF would not be too good a temperature for lukewarm water, it would be too cool but 71 ºC would be way to warm.
You don't buy lukewarm water, you heat water until its lukewarm.
Only if mixed with water of a hot temperature. If it's lukewarm or below it should be ok.
t he amount of water absorbed by raisins depends upon temperature of water .The more the temperature of water the more is the water absorbed.water is absorbed the most in lukewarm water.
Lukewarm water is water that has a temperature a little warmer than room temperature.
Tepid means lukewarm, or room temperature not hot but not cold. This is likely talking about a sponge moistened with water at this temperature.
The water in the bathtub was lukewarm.