• @Serinus
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    2 years ago

    0 is freezing (32F)
    10 is cold (50F)
    20 is nice (68F)
    30 is hot (86F)

    • @sdrawk
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      2 years ago

      40 is unbearable

      50 is death, tar sticks to your shoes, why am I outside?

    • @guriinii
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      72 years ago

      5 is cold 10 is fresh 20 is warm 25 is hot 30 is too fucking hot

      • @charliespider
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        2 years ago

        If it’s also humid, then yes.

        But I think those numbers define the start of those regions. So 30 is when “hot” starts.

        • @Serinus
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          32 years ago

          Those numbers are easy to remember with what they mean. 0, 10, 20, 30 is an easy sequence. So is “freezing”, “cold”, “warm”, “hot”.

          It’s an easy guide to learning Celsius in a little more native way. The translation to Fahrenheit is provided, but not intended to be explicitly memorized. You can always do the C * 2 - 10% + 32 = F mentally if you really need to.

          • @charliespider
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            2 years ago

            I’m not American so I won’t be converting to F, but I somewhat agree with the person I responded to that 30°C / 86°F is not really hot… unless it also happens to be humid, in which case, that temperature can be quite uncomfortable.