The same can be said for 'football Vs soccer'.
12 1 ReplyAnd metric vs imperial (with the exceptions of about three small countries in Africa and Asia, the UK (which uses both systems interchangeably), and NASA).
6 0 ReplyYou can add on Australia, New Zealand, and parts of Ireland and South Africa.
2 0 ReplyYou cannot equate a scale with a name.
2 0 ReplyThey just did
5 0 Reply
Most of Europe including anyone in UK under 60, Asia, Japan, China, Australia. People in engineering and science.
Not many use Fahrenheit.
6 0 ReplyI always get confused with US based people mentioning 38F during the winter đ.
1 0 Reply
There's a few more⊠Major countries like Liberia, Palau, Micronesia, & Belize.
5 0 ReplyThis graph makes sense. Football vs soccer is another one of these.
4 0 ReplyI prefer Farenheit for weather and celsius for everything else.
0 being "really fuckin cold outside" and 100 being "really fuckin hot outside" has a natural intuitiveness. But when you're cooking or doing science or engineering, normalizing your scale around the phases of water is a lot more handy.
6 2 ReplyI'm from Sydney, Australia and 0°C is "really fuckin cold outside"! For us anyway lol.
6 0 ReplyFuck, 10 °C is "really fuckin cold outside" for me in Brissy.
1 0 Reply
Are you from Canada?
3 0 ReplyProbably not as -17c (0F) is not "Really fucking cold outside".
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I hate that Fahrenheit was taught at school. It was just one more formula to learn. Today I know only because of the US.
1 0 ReplyFahrenheit for anything other than ovens feels so wrong haha (I am canadian)
On that note, other parts of the world what unit of measurement do you use for ovens?
1 1 ReplyI use Celsius for the oven. Most of the stuff I use the oven for defaults to 180 degrees.
3 0 ReplyWe use Celsius like for everything else
3 0 ReplyCelsius for your ovens? In canada we use faranheit only on ovens for some reason
4 0 Reply
It's basically the same measurement (as far as I know), but the zero values differ.
2 20 ReplyNo that's Kelvin and Celsius.
Celsius and Fahrenheit have almost nothing in common.
35 0 ReplyI mean technically they are related by F=(9/5) * C+32.
So they're related, just linearly.
17 0 ReplyThe same can be said for 'football Vs soccer'.
4 1 Replythatâs Kelvin and Celsius
Or Rankine and Fahrenheit.
2 0 ReplyOh, yeah, sorry đ.
1 0 Reply
That is not the only difference.
17 0 ReplyYou are misinformed. There are about 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit to every 1 degree Celsius. Or a change of 10°C is a change of 18°F
4 0 Reply