It depend on if its hot tea or iced tea. If it's hot then the temperature of the tea is probably higher than a freezing iceburg
No a cup of tea is a cup of tea u morons
A cup of tea with milk could fall into a range of temperatures. However, a good temperature to drink tea is around 85 degrees.
No, that temperature is below the freezing point of water. It would be real iced tea--har har har.
the tea particlers ' buoyancy
they equalize and become the same temperature as the surrounding atmosphere and you get tea for the boston tea act reenactmen:0
Possibly, if the pitcher was large enough. Heat and temperature mean two different representations of heat energy. Heat is the absolute value, temperature is the average value. For example, a swimming pool at 25 deg C has more heat contained within it than a cup of water at 25 deg C. However the swimming pool has the same temperature as the cup of water. Since heat is based on the absolute value, which is proportional to the amount, a pitcher of lemonade may have more overall heat than a small cup of hot tea, although the temperature of the tea would be higher than the pitcher of lemonade.
No, the temperature of hot tea is substantially higher than the maximum that a clinical thermometer is designed for.
No, the temperature of hot tea is substantially higher than the maximum that a clinical thermometer is designed for.
He has a cup of tea.
thermometer
There is no such English phrase as "tea of a cup." You either have a cup of tea, or you have tea in a cup.
It has a much higher volume of water compared to the tea cup. It takes less energy to heat a small amount of liquid such as a tea cup.