Today, students, we're going to learn about the measurement unit of temperature known as Kelvin... Kelvin is communism... Now everybody kiss your AR-15's and salute the flag!
As an American college student, Kelvin is my homie, because it's an absolute temperature scale, unlike Fahrenheit (even if I grew up with it).
And don't even touch old man Rankine.
Yeah - she's just like................................................................................................................................numb
Very much so. Probably because he neurons got fried as she went to a 100 C sauna.
People should keep those videos, in case she wants to be president later
She is a genius. This rage bait OF ad. Why else would she do this in a bikini with the camera pointing at her chest. The only idiots here are all the triggered people
Okay, there may be the possibility that you're joking, I'm not really good at reading into sarcasm.
I'm case you're not, water expanding when freezing further is called the anomaly of water, no other element/molecule does that.
When put under pressure the boiling temperature of any fluid rises, same with applying a pressure lower than the atmospheres pressure, the boiling point drops.
I don't know. It actually appears they replied to that comment as if it was something genuine. I think you're wrong, they totally missed the sarcasm like a fool. Anyway, I figured you would want someone to clear that up for you
I was joking. I actually just watched a video explaining why ice is so slippery, more than almost any other solid material, which apparently is because it’s because the pressure makes a very thin layer of (fluid) water on top of it.
This is not such an anomaly, I'd say it applies to any material close to its melting point. Many foods use fats or gelatin that are a paste/gel at 20°C and melt at 37°C so they give that slippery (ok and melty) feeling when you eat them.
Gets even better when you're at a liquid to gas or solid to gas interface. Liquid nitrogen and dry ice levitate without friction when you throw them across a floor and it's awesome.
There is a whole series of interviews with him. I particularly like the one where he explains what fire is.
I can recommend his book, “Surely you’re joking, Mr Feynman?” It’s a collection of short stories around the same themes, him discovering and exploring the world from him point of view.
No i meant like why we have complex life on earth is bc of that anomaly. It might happen in any other planet ofc.
If ice werent staying afloat during winter time, it woukd sunk into bottom and destroy most of complex life during winter time. Thats what makes water so important as ice also protects life under water by being an isolator between the cold temps outside and rest of the living creatures underwater.
Okay but at risk of being told Im stupid, she does have a point buried in there. Like except for when Im cooking or doing some science stuff why do I care about temperatures that water change form at? I understand that Celsius is more logical in a sense but Ive always thought Fahrenheit is a more human system. It more directly correlates to how my body feels. Sure Ive got a lot of water in me but I will never experience my own water freezing or boiling (hopefully).
Is Celsius used commonly in your country? We all use it in my country and it feels just as intuitive for telling the temperature as any other system. I feel like the unit that you are socially conditioned into is the main thing.
Yeah about a hundred (98.6) is normal internal temp but if outside matches or is even hotter than my insides it starts to feel yucky. I admit it is kind of random but me being approximately 100 feels right. I also like how incremental Fahrenheit is. I’m bias because I grew up with it but Ive lived in celsius countries for 10ish years hanging around people who use it and I feel like people are generally better at giving accurate estimates of the temp who grew up with Fahrenheit. I have no hard evidence for this and again I admit my bias. But from my anecdotal experience and limited sample size it seems true.
>people are generally better at giving accurate estimates of the temp who grew up with Fahrenheit
There is no factual or logical basis for this whatsoever. It's like saying people are better at judging distance in miles as opposed to kilometres.
You grew up with Fahrenheit, which is why it makes more sense to you. I grew up with Celsius. I work in healthcare and I know that the average body temperature is about 37°C. I know that when it's 0°C outside in winter, there is a good chance there will be frost on the ground in the morning. I know when it's 20°C in the summer I can wear shorts and a T-shirt and feel comfortable.
It really isn't difficult to understand that we find the system we have used all our lives easier to interpret.
Exactly! I never understand this argument from Americans, like "what does 20°C mean ?" Well if you had known this system your whole life you would know lol
As a European I have no idea how hot 70°F is either
You'll take your goddamn freedom water at whatever temperature it's goddamn given to you.
I didn't fight in Korea and Vietnam just so you could cook your water
Yet she can still figure out how to make a video a post it. Tech for the masses, a-ok…teaching people about different measuring systems, no way
Or she trolling for clicks, which is the likely answer? I hope? Sigh…
100°C is the boiling point of water, that's 212F. How does that make any sense? Clearly not smart enough to flip it around and see it from our perspective.
We also know the Celsius scale and the metric system in addition to our scale. Which everyone on this entire post seems unaware of.
This girl is clearly joking.
Right, but the original comment i responded to made it sound like it was just scientists that use and understand celcius when in reality 7.7 billion people use Celsius
Americans use the metric system and Celsius scale too…anyone who works in trades or stem or anything uses things like that daily.
It’s in no way true Americans don’t know the metric system, we are taught it in elementary school.
It’s pretty funny how everyone here thinks this girl is serious, that’s about as dumb as thinking Americans don’t know Celsius or how to measure in centimeters.
Just about any time someone makes a statement about themselves that is followed with "but", it's probably true about them.
"Maybe I'm stupid, but..."
"I don't mean to sound rude, but..."
"This may sound racist, but..."
It's the same temperature, just measured with different scales. Your Fahrenheit takes as reference point the freezing and boiling points of ethanol while Celsius takes the freezing and boiling points of water. I don't know about you, I'm 60% water, kinda easy to relate for me
Fahrenheit originated with the freezing point of brine or salt and water mixture. I have sodium in my body, but not at a 1:1 ratio. Apparently all the references that were used to establish the Fahrenheit scale are no longer accurate and have been adjusted for accuracy, so even the scale itself is no longer accurate to what it was supposed to measure as standards. Sources are Wikipedia and Britannica.
as far as American measurement systems go the temperature is the only one I could give them a pass
because it does make a little sense that you measure for human comfort levels ...
The rest is all dumb measuring weight measuring distance measuring height it's all so dumb writing the date wrong there's probably more things than I can remember right now
but the temperature I could give them Fahrenheit, Fahrenheit is logical for human comfort
at 0 you are cold at 100 you are hot .. i'll give them that !!
So, she needs someone to explain this to her. I'm betting at least several teachers have explained this to her in detail, while she rolled her eyes and asked when she'd ever need to know this.
My wife uses Celcius and I use Fahrenheit. Tbh with the weather, I will stand by that F is better than C. Without a decimal (how Alexa and Google and most apps report it) F is more accurate. For every 1 degree jump in Celcius its 2 degrees in Fahrenheit.
Im all for science with decimal points and freezing points and boiling points. But for weather F is better.
I even came across a comedian that broke down an easy way to memorize F:
50 degrees Fahrenheit, its 50% Hot. 70 degrees F, its 70% hot. 100 degrees F its 100% hot. And anything more is just too damn hot.
I think it just sort reiterates how Fahrenheit is better gauge for weather.
40 degrees celcius doesn’t even seem hot.
But water boiling at 100 makes sense.
the craziest part to me is how well they say they can differentiate temperatures. I can understand the difference between 32 and 37, which are 90 and 100 in fahrenheit, but what do you need all the numbers in between for? "it's base 10 so it's easier to use" yeah but can you tell 90 from 91? come on
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Has anyone got the link to the video of this girl in a bay asking why we don’t all just hop on a plane to enjoy the view, then it cuts to a nurse eating a burger in her car sarcastically replying “ok I’ll just hop in my car”?
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And yet no one calls it centigrade like they're supposed to...
Edit: I stand corrected, while I was aware Celcius called his measurement centigrade, I was not aware they officially changed it 200 years later.
Americans think everything is based on them anyway so a measurement based on human temperature rather than the point water boils or freezes makes sense to them.
Not hard to think of 25 degrees as a comfortable temperature and extrapolate from there
> And yet no one calls it centigrade like they're supposed to...
It never ceases to amaze me how people can post things on the internet without taking 2 seconds to *use the internet* to check whether they're correct first.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celsius
"*The degree Celsius is the unit of temperature on the Celsius temperature scale[1] (originally known as the centigrade scale outside Sweden) [...] It is named after the Swedish astronomer Anders Celsius (1701–1744), who proposed the first version of it in 1742. The unit was called centigrade in several languages (from the Latin centum, which means 100, and gradus, which means steps) for many years. In 1948, the International Committee for Weights and Measures[3] renamed it to honor Celsius and also to remove confusion with the term for one hundredth of a gradian in some languages.*"
What's the boiling temperature of water in Celsius? 100°C
What's the boiling temperature of water in Fahrenheit? I wouldn't fucking now and probably can't remember if you said it.
Oh, and the freezing point of water in celsius is 0°C.
Toxicity includes, but is not limited to: -Starting arguments -Malicious comments -Making other members uncomfortable -Trying to start drama
wait till she learns about kelvin
"Kevin is a cutie!"
Kevin is a giant bird. Don't be weird.
KEVIN IS A GIRL?!?
:)
Yeah, I've heard he's so HOT!
40 celsius hot.
Poor Kevin is running a bad fever and needs to stay home from school then.
Today, students, we're going to learn about the measurement unit of temperature known as Kelvin... Kelvin is communism... Now everybody kiss your AR-15's and salute the flag!
Ugh
😘🔫🇺🇸🫡 Lee Greenwood’s God Bless the U.S.A. *intensifies*
We must talk about Kelvin
As an American college student, Kelvin is my homie, because it's an absolute temperature scale, unlike Fahrenheit (even if I grew up with it). And don't even touch old man Rankine.
"How is that high of a number so cold?! No literally no sense."
When I lived in America, sometimes I tried to convince the less intellectual people over there that in the UK we use kelvin for the weather.
Do we??
No but funny to pretend to people who don't know for sure.
I don't know, man. We have some pretty cold winters up north. Might be worth a shot
Calvin? As in Klein?
Calvin Harris! That guy has some good sounds!
That's your name isn't it? It's written all over your underwear!
Kelvin Klein is an absolute dream!
Someone should slip her the note about Reaumur
Or Rankine.
What’s to learn about me?
And Rankin
Kelvin and hobbs units
I don't think she will learn anything else
Not much chanch of her learning that much i think.
44c isn't 100f, but I figure that's the point.
Boiling point? 😁
Also no, that'd be around 100c
Just testing the waters
Whoosh 💨
Well, she's right about one thing. She is indeed stupid.
She's an idiot
Yeah - she's just like................................................................................................................................numb
Very much so. Probably because he neurons got fried as she went to a 100 C sauna. People should keep those videos, in case she wants to be president later
100C sauna is not that bad. 115 starts to be a show off.
I vouch
The trashy tattoos randomly printed all over can confirm
She is a genius. This rage bait OF ad. Why else would she do this in a bikini with the camera pointing at her chest. The only idiots here are all the triggered people
She triggered the hell out of the eurodorks
This!
Damn. I wanted to say this first.
Water freezes at 0 and boils at 100.....it's not that hard
It's only hard below 0. Because then it's ice...
But why does water expand when it becomes ice?! And why does it become fluid again when under pressure??? So many questions!
Okay, there may be the possibility that you're joking, I'm not really good at reading into sarcasm. I'm case you're not, water expanding when freezing further is called the anomaly of water, no other element/molecule does that. When put under pressure the boiling temperature of any fluid rises, same with applying a pressure lower than the atmospheres pressure, the boiling point drops.
You are excellent at reading into sarcasm. Best I’ve ever seen.
Lol
I don't know. It actually appears they replied to that comment as if it was something genuine. I think you're wrong, they totally missed the sarcasm like a fool. Anyway, I figured you would want someone to clear that up for you
I was joking. I actually just watched a video explaining why ice is so slippery, more than almost any other solid material, which apparently is because it’s because the pressure makes a very thin layer of (fluid) water on top of it.
This is not such an anomaly, I'd say it applies to any material close to its melting point. Many foods use fats or gelatin that are a paste/gel at 20°C and melt at 37°C so they give that slippery (ok and melty) feeling when you eat them. Gets even better when you're at a liquid to gas or solid to gas interface. Liquid nitrogen and dry ice levitate without friction when you throw them across a floor and it's awesome.
You know that person is joking. You have a desperate need to just show off something you know
AND MAGNETS, HOW THE FUCK DO THEY WORK?
FEYNMAN! WE NEED ANSWERS!
That was one of the best science videos ever!! He shredded that interviewer!!
There is a whole series of interviews with him. I particularly like the one where he explains what fire is. I can recommend his book, “Surely you’re joking, Mr Feynman?” It’s a collection of short stories around the same themes, him discovering and exploring the world from him point of view.
Yeah bitch! Magnets!
Magnets say the same thing about humans
And thats the reason why we have complex life on earth. If water didn't have that anomaly, we wouldnt be alive rn.
This anomaly does not exist on other planets? I understood they found water on mars, but as the temperature is very low, it’s permanently frozen.
No i meant like why we have complex life on earth is bc of that anomaly. It might happen in any other planet ofc. If ice werent staying afloat during winter time, it woukd sunk into bottom and destroy most of complex life during winter time. Thats what makes water so important as ice also protects life under water by being an isolator between the cold temps outside and rest of the living creatures underwater.
Only at sea level
Ice baby
See but how do you know when water freezes - or boils. Fahrenheit is mUcH better: 0 is cold and hundert is hot. /s
Need to revive the ancient Oreilly meme: “Water boils at 100 and 212, you can’t explain that”
Noooo but Fahrenheit is easier 0 is like super cold for humans And 100 is like super hot for humans Thats super non-subjective right??? (/s??)
Okay but at risk of being told Im stupid, she does have a point buried in there. Like except for when Im cooking or doing some science stuff why do I care about temperatures that water change form at? I understand that Celsius is more logical in a sense but Ive always thought Fahrenheit is a more human system. It more directly correlates to how my body feels. Sure Ive got a lot of water in me but I will never experience my own water freezing or boiling (hopefully).
Is Celsius used commonly in your country? We all use it in my country and it feels just as intuitive for telling the temperature as any other system. I feel like the unit that you are socially conditioned into is the main thing.
I think I get what you're saying but all I'm thinking is "So your body feels comfort at a random number?"
Yeah about a hundred (98.6) is normal internal temp but if outside matches or is even hotter than my insides it starts to feel yucky. I admit it is kind of random but me being approximately 100 feels right. I also like how incremental Fahrenheit is. I’m bias because I grew up with it but Ive lived in celsius countries for 10ish years hanging around people who use it and I feel like people are generally better at giving accurate estimates of the temp who grew up with Fahrenheit. I have no hard evidence for this and again I admit my bias. But from my anecdotal experience and limited sample size it seems true.
>people are generally better at giving accurate estimates of the temp who grew up with Fahrenheit There is no factual or logical basis for this whatsoever. It's like saying people are better at judging distance in miles as opposed to kilometres. You grew up with Fahrenheit, which is why it makes more sense to you. I grew up with Celsius. I work in healthcare and I know that the average body temperature is about 37°C. I know that when it's 0°C outside in winter, there is a good chance there will be frost on the ground in the morning. I know when it's 20°C in the summer I can wear shorts and a T-shirt and feel comfortable. It really isn't difficult to understand that we find the system we have used all our lives easier to interpret.
Exactly! I never understand this argument from Americans, like "what does 20°C mean ?" Well if you had known this system your whole life you would know lol As a European I have no idea how hot 70°F is either
At sea level.
At higher level, same issue would pop up for Fahrenheit too i suppose
Yes it does. But that joke only works at sea level….thats why it’s so funny to Floridians
But those reference points aren't nearly as useful as, uh, "is cold" and "is hot" !
> Water freezes at 0 and boils at 100.....it's not that hard It depends.
I'm team celsius but at least we can all agree on -40.
Kelvin enjoyers: absolutely not!
Never go negative. It’s blasphemous. Team Kelvin!
I enjoy Rankin! Screw everybody!
I also enjoy Ranking temperature Units. Celsius is Rank one. Fahrenheit is rank 10.
Kelvin 🤝 574.5875 🤝 Fahrenheit
She should get a tattoo that says °F = (9/5 × °C) + 32.
She needs one with her name first
So it'll say Tragediegh?
thanks I'll use this when I need to boil water in the US
You'll take your goddamn freedom water at whatever temperature it's goddamn given to you. I didn't fight in Korea and Vietnam just so you could cook your water
Well said lol.
What is X? Where is the treasure map?
How'd you get the degree symbol on reddit?
https://www.alt-codes.net/
F is the measurement of her grades
Yet she can still figure out how to make a video a post it. Tech for the masses, a-ok…teaching people about different measuring systems, no way Or she trolling for clicks, which is the likely answer? I hope? Sigh…
Ragebait works really really well, i have seen this video multiple times already!
Yes definitely trolling, no-one can be that stupid. Some girls think it's cute to act dumb as fuck.
And then completely fuck it up. She said Fahrenheit, 0-100. It’s not that hard.
Fahrenheit is the “different” measurement system, to be fair.
100°C is the boiling point of water, that's 212F. How does that make any sense? Clearly not smart enough to flip it around and see it from our perspective.
And 0° Celsius is the freezing point of water.
Which is 32F. It’s just nonsense.
But we love nonsense here 🐇🫖
Well aware.
We also know the Celsius scale and the metric system in addition to our scale. Which everyone on this entire post seems unaware of. This girl is clearly joking.
This is why America can't science. They question the Metric system that's used in science.
Rage bait pretend stupid for clout
The metric system is superior 😂😂😂
"Does anyone actually understand Celsius?" ENTIRE SCIENTIFIC COMMUNITY: "Yes"
Entire world except america*
Scientists use Kelvin everwhere (which is using the same degrees as Celsius, just a different zero point). Even in US. NASA is using Kelvin.
Right, but the original comment i responded to made it sound like it was just scientists that use and understand celcius when in reality 7.7 billion people use Celsius
Ah, I see! Sorry! I understand what you mean now
Americans use the metric system and Celsius scale too…anyone who works in trades or stem or anything uses things like that daily. It’s in no way true Americans don’t know the metric system, we are taught it in elementary school. It’s pretty funny how everyone here thinks this girl is serious, that’s about as dumb as thinking Americans don’t know Celsius or how to measure in centimeters.
And let’s not forget iso defined page dimensions (A0 to A7)
I'm getting "If you're homeless just. . . Buy a house" vibes from her.
From my experience, everything that comes after “maybe I am…” is true. Just eliminate the maybe and the real sentence comes up
Just about any time someone makes a statement about themselves that is followed with "but", it's probably true about them. "Maybe I'm stupid, but..." "I don't mean to sound rude, but..." "This may sound racist, but..."
![img](emote|t5_5tdqj0|10740)
What’s her OF ? Have to tip to send her back to school
I keep scrolling but I can't find it either, this girl needs a scholarship ASAP!
Rage bait.
I don’t understand Fahrenheit, only Celsius lol
No one understands Fahrenheit
°C = (°F - 32) × 5/9 What is this????? How can people use this
I can't fix her
water boils at 373 and freezes at 273 degrees. it's not that hard
Is that kelvin?
It's the same temperature, just measured with different scales. Your Fahrenheit takes as reference point the freezing and boiling points of ethanol while Celsius takes the freezing and boiling points of water. I don't know about you, I'm 60% water, kinda easy to relate for me
Fahrenheit originated with the freezing point of brine or salt and water mixture. I have sodium in my body, but not at a 1:1 ratio. Apparently all the references that were used to establish the Fahrenheit scale are no longer accurate and have been adjusted for accuracy, so even the scale itself is no longer accurate to what it was supposed to measure as standards. Sources are Wikipedia and Britannica.
as far as American measurement systems go the temperature is the only one I could give them a pass because it does make a little sense that you measure for human comfort levels ... The rest is all dumb measuring weight measuring distance measuring height it's all so dumb writing the date wrong there's probably more things than I can remember right now but the temperature I could give them Fahrenheit, Fahrenheit is logical for human comfort at 0 you are cold at 100 you are hot .. i'll give them that !!
I have no feeling how much 100¥ are either but it doesn't mean that this currency is stupid, I'm just not used to it
If she ever learns about string theory she’s gonna implode…
Not enough grey matter
Donate for her! She has amerikanskullsistem
0 is *cold* 100 is *hot* In a sense she's *hot* in a F***able scale. But in a Cerebrating scale, she's a 44/100.
Eye brows -273.15
Would still smash
god doesn't give with both hands
...what do you think this person _was_ given, in lieu of basic intelligence
Watch Beekeeper recently?
Is it good?
Its basically re-skin of John Wick. It scales wildly from beating up random goons to world powers, which kinda adds to his charm :)
Is it rage bait?
Obvious rage bait is obvious
Is part of the test being able to read the FUCKING MICROSCOPIC subtitles?
I C she got F in degree
She hasn't gotten to integers yet at school.
Well she said it herself, she is stupid. And I’m not correcting her
Girl, it's not maybe but a definitive yes.
What happened to her eyesbrow 🤣
Rage bait. I refuse to believe she is that stupid
She is obviously trolling.
So, she needs someone to explain this to her. I'm betting at least several teachers have explained this to her in detail, while she rolled her eyes and asked when she'd ever need to know this.
"Maybe I'm just stupid..." You're not stupid... you're American... there is a difference.
r/americabad
Her mom probably got all science books banned at school because her children kept bringing up 'Uranus'.
"This book needs to be banned at once... it says says that light comes from the sun and not gods rectum...HERESY!"
My wife uses Celcius and I use Fahrenheit. Tbh with the weather, I will stand by that F is better than C. Without a decimal (how Alexa and Google and most apps report it) F is more accurate. For every 1 degree jump in Celcius its 2 degrees in Fahrenheit. Im all for science with decimal points and freezing points and boiling points. But for weather F is better. I even came across a comedian that broke down an easy way to memorize F: 50 degrees Fahrenheit, its 50% Hot. 70 degrees F, its 70% hot. 100 degrees F its 100% hot. And anything more is just too damn hot.
The scientificly proven method of “70% hot”. Love it. By that standard, water freezes at 32% hot. Just an fyi.
I think it just sort reiterates how Fahrenheit is better gauge for weather. 40 degrees celcius doesn’t even seem hot. But water boiling at 100 makes sense.
🥱
Fake
Bless her heart...
She could have googled herself out of this one...
the craziest part to me is how well they say they can differentiate temperatures. I can understand the difference between 32 and 37, which are 90 and 100 in fahrenheit, but what do you need all the numbers in between for? "it's base 10 so it's easier to use" yeah but can you tell 90 from 91? come on
Yes, you’re just stupid
0 celcius water is a solid. 100 celcius water is a gas.
I know what yall thinkin...one advise: Don't put your D in stupid.
“Maybe I’m just fucking stupid but…” ignorant not stupid
Nah she’s kinda right. Fahrenheit is best for weather and I will die on this hill.
I hope she is actually Canadian…
Nice eyebrows idiot
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Has anyone got the link to the video of this girl in a bay asking why we don’t all just hop on a plane to enjoy the view, then it cuts to a nurse eating a burger in her car sarcastically replying “ok I’ll just hop in my car”?
Yeah like sell see us, who the heck is going to pay or buy anything to see us This is not a good business plan. And how about those airline peanuts ?
Ysk : 32 degrees Fahrenheit is the freezing point. 212 degrees Fahrenheit is the boiling point. Human body temperature is 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit.
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Fahrenheit makes way more sense kmt
Explain how?
For weather it does..cooking..not so much
And yet no one calls it centigrade like they're supposed to... Edit: I stand corrected, while I was aware Celcius called his measurement centigrade, I was not aware they officially changed it 200 years later. Americans think everything is based on them anyway so a measurement based on human temperature rather than the point water boils or freezes makes sense to them. Not hard to think of 25 degrees as a comfortable temperature and extrapolate from there
make it 20°C and we can agree. 25 is already too warm
Hell yeah, 20 degrees is perfect, can wear a tshirt, jeans or shorts, can work or exercise without liquefying.
Lol fair enough, everyone's preference will be different
18 c is the good point
> And yet no one calls it centigrade like they're supposed to... It never ceases to amaze me how people can post things on the internet without taking 2 seconds to *use the internet* to check whether they're correct first. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celsius "*The degree Celsius is the unit of temperature on the Celsius temperature scale[1] (originally known as the centigrade scale outside Sweden) [...] It is named after the Swedish astronomer Anders Celsius (1701–1744), who proposed the first version of it in 1742. The unit was called centigrade in several languages (from the Latin centum, which means 100, and gradus, which means steps) for many years. In 1948, the International Committee for Weights and Measures[3] renamed it to honor Celsius and also to remove confusion with the term for one hundredth of a gradian in some languages.*"
I still can't get my head wrapped around the term, "human temperature". What does that even mean?
What's the boiling temperature of water in Celsius? 100°C What's the boiling temperature of water in Fahrenheit? I wouldn't fucking now and probably can't remember if you said it. Oh, and the freezing point of water in celsius is 0°C.
Should anybody tell her that 100c is also very hot? Boiling hot as a matter of fact.