Well, English is a pretty broad term. But I assume you mean British because of "England". The British way of mesuring temperature is the same as Canadians, measured in Celsius.
But just incase you meant the American way of measuring temperature, that would be in Fahrenheit.
The SI base unit for temperature is the kelvin.
The base unit of Temperature is Kelvin (K)
Kelvin is the SI unit for thermodynamic temperature. symbol: K (there are no degrees, unlike °C and °F).
Because every object has mass but the metric unit of measure is grams
yes The Kelvin scale is a way of measuring temperature from absolute zero. The gradient is the same as the Celsius (or Centigrade) scale. Not actually a unit of heat, just a measurement of temperature.
In English the unit of temperature if Fahrenheit shown as F°. In Metric the unit is Celsius shown as C°.
If by English you mean American then yes, in London I believe they use Celsius.
No. Kelvin is an International and therefore the standard unit for measuring temperature.
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.
The Kelvin is the SI unit for thermodynamic temperature.
A quart is an English unit.
The SI base unit for temperature is the kelvin.
The base unit of Temperature is Kelvin (K)
The base unit of Temperature is Kelvin (K)
The SI unit of temperature is Kelvin, but degrees Celsius is a derived SI unit for temperature and more commonly used.
The SI unit for measuring temperature is Kelvinkelvin kelvin
kelvin