Making the rather unwarranted assumption that the temperatures are in the context of pure water at normal pressure, the answer would be the milligrade scale - except that nobody uses it.
You are mixing apples and oranges. A degree is a unit of measure. How big the unit is depends upon the scale. Fahreheit is a scale of temperature measurement. There are 180 degrees between boiling and freezing temperature of water. Celsius is a scale of temperature measurement. There are 100 degrees between boiling and freezing termperature of water.
Celsius degrees. 0°c is freezing point. 100°c is boiling point. Celsius
Zero degrees C= Freezing temperature for water and one hundred degrees C= Boiling temperature for water.
There isn't any but if you mean freezing of 32 degrees and boiling of 212 degrees then it is the Fahrenheit temperature scale.
It is centigrade, which is now known as Celsius.
Freezing = 0 Boiling = 100
freezing= 0 boiling= 100
The ice point and steam point that you refer to are called the boiling and freezing point. Each substance has a different boiling and freezing point, though for water it is 0 degrees Celsius is freezing and 100 degrees Celsius is boiling. Or if you use Fahrenheit, it is 32 degrees Fahrenheit for freezing and 212 degrees Fahrenheit for boiling. So depending on what system of measurement you use for temperature, the number of degrees separating the boiling and freezing points of water can be 100 degrees for Celsius or 180 degrees for Fahrenheit.
Pure water has a freezing temperature of 0 degrees and a boiling temperature of 100 degrees, unlike tap water which has impurities that can alter it's freezing and boiling point
50 degrees Celsius or 122 degrees Fahrenheit
The Celsius temperature scale has 100 degrees between freezing and boiling.
Celsius (or Centigrade)