Celsius is the right word for the unit of temperature, not centigrade. One degree Celsius is 1/100 of the difference between the freezing and boiling points of water. Here is a nice temperature converter. Scroll down to related links and look at "Conversion of temperatures and formulas".
You can't convert units of temperature to units of energy.
Degrees Centigrade (Celsius), Fahrenheit, or kelvins.
No. Those are units of temperature. Heat is measured in units of energy, such as the joule.
Mainly;Centigrade or Celsius (o C)Fahrenheit (o F)
the daily mean temperature is 13.4 Centigrade
It means in Centigrade or Celsius temperature metric scale
No, centigrade is a unit of temperature, not amplitudes.No, centigrade is a unit of temperature, not amplitudes.No, centigrade is a unit of temperature, not amplitudes.No, centigrade is a unit of temperature, not amplitudes.
If you are measuring temperature, the unit of measurement is either Fahrenheit or Centigrade. If you are measuring height, the unit of measurement could be feet and inches or meters and so on.
Fahrenheit, Kelvin, and Centigrade (Also called Celsius).
The SI unit for temperature is the Kelvin, but the general public (non-scientists) usually uses in most countries is Celsius, also known as Centigrade.
Since Kelvin = Centigrade + 273.15, YES - it will always be higher than the equivalent centigrade temperature.
13oC means a temperature of Thirteen Degrees Centigrade.