>17 C°
>27 C°
>>74340108
Too cold
>>74340165
This is pretty much perfect
>>74340108
>40 C°
>>74340108
>46 C°
>more than 20º C
>dont take a bath daily
Ewww
>>74340364
>not abstaining showers in order to remove your allergies
>>74340484
>your allergies
bad genetics?
>16ºC
>>74340740
I don't have a single allergy
it was something I saw at Courage the cowardly dog
there was an episode where a man didn't bathe and thus became immortal
fun show
They say this will be the hottest summer all decade. Not sure how I'll survive.
>>74341004
become Greek
>>74341004
I hope you are wrong
>>74340990
Kek. Nice reference
>>74340165
>>74340867
Can't wait for some steamed hams
>75° F
>>74341004
Källa?
>>74342631
Fahrenheit is arbitrary bullshit and you know it
>>74342805
>The current version of the Fahrenheit scale is, in my opinion, the best temperature scale for meteorology in temperate climates. If you think about it, most air temperatures in the mid latitudes are between 0 °F and 100 °F. It works so well that the average surface air temperature of the earth is very nearly in the middle of this range (something like 50 °F). That makes for a very efficient use of two digits.
>Fahrenheit gives you almost double—1.8x—the precision of Celsius without having to delve into decimals, allowing you to better relate to the air temperature. Again, we're sensitive to small shifts in temperature, so Fahrenheit allows us to discern between two readings more easily than Saint Celsius ever could.
>Fahrenheit makes more sense for precision and as a way of communicating air temperature in a way that relates to how humans perceive temperatures.
-Steven Eagling