I'd take offense if I could; but you're right... I think... idk, I can't think. I'm not upset, you're upset!
What's an up set?
I just use
30°C is hot, 20°C is nice 10°C is cold, 0°C is ice.
Obviously that won't apply everywhere, but in milder climates it works pretty good.
I certainly know what degrees Celsius are, but I have no idea what Celsius degrees are supposed to be.
MY CAR GETS 18 FARTHINGS TO THE HOGSHEAD AND THAT'S THE WAY I LIKE IT
Irc the US is now the only (or one of two countries) that doesn't officially use the metric system. Uncle Sam just needs to rip the bandaid off.
I can understand canadians wearing shorts on a 10° day, Aussies sometimes do the same. But what Australian wears a jacket on a 30°C day???
I live in NSW and I've seen people wearing shorts in winter but nobody with a jacket if it's 30. Long sleeved shirts for workers, yes sometimes. Umbrellas, yes, too. I didn't know jackets were a thing for hot QLD days.
The sun is hot and stings as you say though, granted
I'm in Vic and have indeed worn jackets and jumpers while it's 30 out. Although usually 25+ is when I start to get rid of some layers
Unpopular opinion time; the US already uses metric/Celsius where it matters; in science, engineering and the military. Where it doesn't matter, we use a weird hybrid system that makes intuitive sense to us and is accordingly perfectly functional and doesn't need to be changed.
Not just us not understanding Celcius. Where I come from, we wear shorts down to 0°C or lower.
The easy but not quite right conversion from C to F is to double it, then add 30.
F to C is subtract 30 and divide by 2.
When doing a simple double/half, 30 will give less average error between 0° and 100°C. Though the real formula is C * 9 / 5 + 32 = F