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What? They're ten full degrees apart in Celsius. Stating simply the temperature to the nearest whole number is plenty for day to day usage.
You can take your celcius bologna and shove it in your snow piles.
I just can't force myself to learn it.
 
What? They're ten full degrees apart in Celsius. Stating simply the temperature to the nearest whole number is plenty for day to day usage.

Hmm that’s true.... I guess I figured there’d be a way bigger variance between the numbers/temperatures but so guess it’s only what? Like two degrees apart? I guess that’s not that far off. Just seemed way more far off haha sorry. :oops:

I guess growing up not using it it just seems so weird to me to not have numbers for everything haha

But I guess if you were used to it it would just seem normal haha
 
You can take your celcius bologna and shove it in your snow piles.
I just can't force myself to learn it.
It's okay. You can persist in having to get out a paper and pencil every time you want to read a foreign study involving temperatures. :p

Hmm that’s true.... I guess I figured there’d be a way bigger variance between the numbers/temperatures but so guess it’s only what? Like two degrees apart? I guess that’s not that far off. Just seemed way more far off haha sorry. :oops:

I guess growing up not using it it just seems so weird to me to not have numbers for everything haha

But I guess if you were used to it it would just seem normal haha
There are numbers for everything. What makes Fahrenheit the standard? Why isn't there a smaller unit called the Pickerel or something that we use that's equivalent to 3/4 of a degree in the Fahrenheit? If we did, then Fahrenheit would seem the faulty system; the imprecise. It's a matter of perspective, not precision.
 
It's okay. You can persist in having to get out a paper and pencil every time you want to read a foreign study involving temperatures. :p


There are numbers for everything. What makes Fahrenheit the standard? Why isn't there a smaller unit called the Pickerel or something that we use that's equivalent to 3/4 of a degree in the Fahrenheit? If we did, then Fahrenheit would seem the faulty system; the imprecise. It's a matter of perspective, not precision.
Neither system is any better than the other. It is where you live and what you were raised with that makes either one the favorite for you. My only problem is that when a person is posting in a forum where both systems are used, they should designate what unit they are using. For example -5°F (-20.56°C) is a whole lot colder than -5°C (23°F).
 
It's okay. You can persist in having to get out a paper and pencil every time you want to read a foreign study involving temperatures. :p


There are numbers for everything. What makes Fahrenheit the standard? Why isn't there a smaller unit called the Pickerel or something that we use that's equivalent to 3/4 of a degree in the Fahrenheit? If we did, then Fahrenheit would seem the faulty system; the imprecise. It's a matter of perspective, not precision.

Pretty sure nobody uses a paper and pencil anymore. :p if somebody feels like doing the calculations/math, they probably use a calculator but I just cheat and use the Google conversions thing :lau :oops:

Ang hmmm.... that’s true. But still, seems there’s less numbers than Fahrenheit. And hm, that’s a good idea! And a good point. And I think Celsius is actually the standard in the rest of the world and in scientific communities, not Fahrenheit. But it’s the standard to me because I grew up with it and have always used it and it’s the one I know. :lau

Well, except in science or math classes when we sometimes used the metric system (so I guess it’s not Celsius specifically that’s the standard actually but the entire Metric system) but even then I always sucked at it. :lau

Especially all that kilometer stuff.

Whenever I go to Canada (which, admittedly, is not very often), the signs confuse me. :lau partially cause they’re all in French and partially cause I don’t know what the speed limit is or how far away anything is. :lau
 
Neither system is any better than the other. It is where you live and what you were raised with that makes either one the favorite for you. My only problem is that when a person is posting in a forum where both systems are used, they should designate what unit they are using. For example -5°F (-20.56°C) is a whole lot colder than -5°C (23°F).

That is very true!! And I’m sorry if it seemed like I was bashing Celsius or anything, I was mostly just kidding. But it does confuse me. But that’s because I didn’t grow up with it. Not anything against the system itself. I’ve just always used it. And yes I agree!! That always confuses me too when people don’t post that.
 

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