Compare for yourself. Scroll down to related links and look at "Conversion of temperatures and formulas".
One unit change in C is = 1.8 unit change in F
One unit change in F is = .56 unit change in C
Use this equation to convert degrees Fahrenheit (ºF) to degrees Celsius/Centigrade (ºC): [°C] = ([°F] - 32) × 0.556
no
5 Fahrenheit is a smaller increase of temperature than 5 Celsius.
After -40 degrees. At -40 degrees, the Celsius and Fahrenheit scales are equal. A temperature greater than -40 in Celsius will be smaller than its equivalent in Fahrenheit, but below -40 degrees Fahrenheit, its equivalent in Celsius will be larger.
Fahrenheit degrees are smaller, so 5°F is a smaller increase than 5°C.
A 5 degree Fahrenheit increase is less than a 5 degree Celsius increase
Yes, it is. One degree Fahrenheit is a small unit than one degree Celsius. The ration is 9 to 5, with 9 degrees Fahrenheit being the same as 5 degrees Celsius.
At -40 degrees, Celsius and Fahrenheit are equal. Warmer than that, and Fahrenheit will have the bigger number than Celsius. Cooler than -40 and Celsius will have a bigger number than Fahrenheit.
if its 25 degrees celsius vs 25 degrees fahrenheit then fahrenheit is colder than celsius
There are two reasons for this. The first is that a Fahrenheit degree is smaller than a Celsius degree. Four Celsius degrees is the same size as nine Fahrenheit degrees. The second reason is that 32 degrees Fahrenheit is zero degrees Celsius. If you put those two ideas together you figure out that -40°F = -40°C.
Celsius degrees are larger than Fahrenheit degrees.
No, is Celsius is hotter than 92 degrees Fahrenheit
I suggest you convert each of the Fahrenheit temperatures to Celsius (or the other way round, each of the Celsius temperatures to Fahrenheit), and then compare.
They are two different scales, with the increments in Fahrenheit smaller than those in celcius. Because of this there is one crossover point where they are the same, -40.