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|    Message 81,432 of 81,972    |
|    Your Name to All    |
|    Re: Tis the Season    |
|    27 Dec 25 10:45:42    |
      XPost: rec.arts.drwho       From: YourName@YourISP.com              On 2025-12-26 09:39:15 +0000, Daniel70 said:              > On 26/12/2025 7:33 am, The True Melissa wrote:       >> In article <10ijben$1rst9$1@dont-email.me>, daniel47       >> @nomail.afraid.org says...       >>> On 25/12/2025 11:31 pm, The Doctor wrote:       >>>>       >>>> Cheers from cool Canada, where is it 0 on both scales.       >>>>       >>> On which 'both scales', Binky??       >>       >> Celsius and Centigrade. :-D       >>       > Ah!! Of course, I had forgotten that, for some reason, there are two       > names for the one scale.       >       > Could that 'two names' thing be an "England v the rest of the World"       > thing?? i.e. the real name is 'Celsius' but England uses 'Centigrade'       > (or vice versa)??              They are just two different names for the same temperature measurement       system - "centigrade", although it was the original name, is now       considered incorrect.               "When Anders Celsius created his original scale in 1742 he        inexplicably chose 0° for the boiling point and 100° for the        freezing point. A little over one year later Frenchman Jean        Pierre Cristin proposed an inverted version of the scale        (freezing point 0°, boiling point 100°). He named it        Centigrade."               "Celsius and centigrade refer to the same temperature scale:        100 degrees between water's freezing (0°C) and boiling (100°C)        points, but Celsius is the official name adopted in 1948 to        honour its inventor, Anders Celsius, and avoid confusion with        other uses of "centigrade" (like angular measurement). So,        while people still use "centigrade," Celsius is the modern,        correct term, standardised by the General Conference on        Weights and Measures."               "Centigrade is the old fashioned name for Celsius as mentioned        above. The name Centigrade was derived from the Latin,        originally meaning a hundred degrees."              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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