Not necessarily. Celsius is a temperature scale and can describe a large range of temperatures.
-110 degrees Celsius is very cold. It is well below freezing and is considered extremely cold.
no... 139 Celsius is above the boiling point of water.
125 degrees Celsius = 257 degrees Fahrenheit (hot, not cold).
1 Celsius is cold - about 33.8 degrees Fahrenheit.
I think you mean Celsius, and that is very hot- 179.6 degrees F.
Cold in Fahrenheit. Hot in Celsius.
"Cold" could mean anything. To me, cold might be 10 degrees Celsius, while someone else sees "cold" as 1 degree Celsius. In science, nothing is ever described as cold, because a questions that always arise are "how cold? 20 degrees Celsius? 0 degrees Celsius? -100 degrees Celsius?"
negative degrees show how cold it is
you can say Pluto is so far away from the sun so it is very cold temperatures ranging from-235 degrees Celsius to-210 degrees Celsius
It is a measure of temperature - pretty cold by most people's standard.
if you mean 10km above ground, then it depends where, but -50 Celsius is not unheard of
-270 Celsius
cold
very cold
18 degrees Celsius is 64.5 degrees Fahrenheit or 291 kelvin. Not cold.
60 degrees Celsius is relatively hot. To get an idea of the Celsius system, consider that: 0 degrees Celsius is where water freezes 20-25 degrees Celsius is room temperature 37 degrees Celsius is body temperature 100 degrees Celsius is where water boils
-110 degrees Celsius is very cold. It is well below freezing and is considered extremely cold.