It is the freezing point of water.
So yes it is cold.
0 degrees Celsius = 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
If I'm not wrong, it should be 0 degrees Celsius.
125 degrees Celsius = 257 degrees Fahrenheit (hot, not cold).
0 degrees Celsius = 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
Not cold at all.
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
Freezing cold. 0 Celsius is 32 Fahrenheit.
It is warm because water freezes at 0 degrees Celsius and water boils at 100 degrees 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?"
No. Ice is 0 degrees Celsius.
0 degrees Fahrenheit is approximately -18 degrees Celsius, and 255 Kelvin
0 degrees celsius
cold, very cold in math! hot or cold... hum hot subject, cold response ;) 0 degrees Celsius is the freezing point of water 0 degrees Fahrenheit is very cold. Freezing point of water is 32 degrees Fahrenheit so dropping down to 0 degrees is even colder
0 degrees Celsius or 32 degrees Fahrenheit or 273 Kelvin
Extremely cold; -89.2 degrees Celsius is -128.56 degrees Fahrenheit.
0 degrees Celsius = 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
0 degrees Fahrenheit is about -17.777778 degrees Celsius