They are equal at - 40, so this would only happen someplace very cold, such as the Arctic circle and Antarctica.
F and C are equal at -40. So.. the Arctic and Antarctic? Probably parts of Alaska
Very, very cold places. The two scales give the same numerical reading at -40 degrees.
It depends Celsius is used in most part of the world and Fahrenheit is only used in USA.
It depends Celsius is used in most part of the world and Fahrenheit is only used in USA.
The C is Celsius and the F is Fahrenheit. On a Celsius scale water freezes at 0 degrees Celsius and boils at 100 degrees Celsius. On a Fahrenheit scale water freezes at 32 degrees Fahrenheit and boils at 212 degrees Fahrenheit because Celsius is used world wide and Fahrenheit is used only in the U.S.
Celsius. Virtually everyone in the world except for the USA does.
celcius, only America and 2 3rd world countries use Fahrenheit
Degree Celsius is a measure of temperature, just like Fahrenheit. The only difference is that Celsius is used in different parts of the world, like South Africa, and Fahrenheit is used in places like America. There is also a difference between temperature in the two. freezing point in Celsius is 0 where as it is 32 in Fahrenheit. Boiling is 100 in Celsius where it is 212 in Fahrenheit
The rest of the world besides US uses Celsius, so yes.
Because Celsius is metric, and everybody in the world uses it. But then we in America made our own thing ( Fahrenheit ) and it's too late to go back.
You could try learning celsius like the rest of the world. ;-)
They measure temperature. In America, Fahrenheit, and in other parts of the world they measure in Celsius.