Well we might die because its very cold. but if it was very hot we will die too so its important that we keep warm and not too cold or to hot. thats why we have to keep warm in winter and cool in summer
It would get cold and freeze stuff.
Degrees Centigrade or Celsius although in some less advanced parts of the world, they still use Fahrenheit.
Most of the world uses the Celsius (or centigrade) scale where the temperature range between freezing water and boiling water is split into 100 degrees going from zero to one hundred degrees.
Penguins live in Antarctica, the coldest place in the world. They can survive in temperatures of -129 degrees Fahrenheit.
The Centigrade scale, a.k.a. the Celsius scale.
Antarctica. It has gotten down to -129 degrees Fahrenheit or -89 degrees Celsius-centigrade.
There are many places in the world that will have a temperature of 80 degrees. One such place that I happen to know of is Johanessburg in South Africa. It has cold winters that are evenly averaged out by the humid and sweltering hot, wet summers.
The standardized measurement of how hot or cold something is would be the temperature. This can be measured in several different units including degrees Fahrenheit, degrees Centigrade, or degrees Kelvin.
commonly used? well fahrenheit and celsius/centigrade(same thing) for weather temperature. Then there is kelvin used in technical/scientific situations and thats about it for common usage so 3 is the answer. There are up to seven different temperature scales but only 3 are used commonly
Yes, centigrade is a synonym for Celcius, which is used in the vast majority of countries around the world. The United States is one of only a handful of countries that retains the Fahrenheidt scale.
-80 to 58 degrees Celsius
Degrees Fahrenheit in America Degrees Celsius in the rest of the world
Celsius, like almost everywhere else in the world. Centigrade is a term that became obsolete in the seventies or before. All recognised temperature scales are named after their creators.