Guess there’s not much need. Most of the prefixes used are 1000 (kilo, mega, etc.) or 1/1000 (milli, micro, etc). The tens and hundreds are a bit odd to use and imo shouldn’t be used. So there’s no need to use prefixes until you’re into Star temperatures or really extreme experiments.
Guess there’s not much need. Most of the prefixes used are 1000 (kilo, mega, etc.) or 1/1000 (milli, micro, etc). The tens and hundreds are a bit odd to use and imo shouldn’t be used. So there’s no need to use prefixes until you’re into Star temperatures or really extreme experiments.
Centicelsius has a nice ring to it.
It would be centidegree.
370 Centigree
That’s ® worthy, fam.
Too close to centigrade, plus centi- actually means 1/100th in the metric system.
There’s nothing special about 3.7°C, but there nothing NOT special about it either. <.<
But that doesn’t have a nice ring to it so…
Nah you need two good grades to get a degree
Centicentigrade
centi- actually means 1/100th in the metric system
What do you mean? The high today was 1.3 decicelcius where I’m at
Edit: decacelcius
You mean decacelsius?
I know that one! That’ a name of a 2D shape