• Dmian@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    VERY generally speaking, 20s are warm, 30s are hot. Humidity changes this a lot. And yes, personal sensitivity to heat plays a role. I live in a dry climate, and I feel rather comfortable until we’re close to 30 ºC. I remember reading something like the ideal room temperature for humans was around 20-22 ºC.

    For those using F, this is, more or less, the scale of C:

    Below 0: freezing (0 ºC being the freezing point of water, duh!)
    0 to 10: cold (don’t go out without a coat)
    10s: cool (a sweatshirt or light coat may do)
    20s: warm
    30s: hot
    40s: uncomfortably hot (stay in the shade and hydrate)
    50s: you’re dead (or you wish you were. Unsafe for humans)

    • uphillbothways@kbin.social
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      11 months ago

      Hot is still relative. Are you talking about soup, a cup of coffee/tea or outside temperature? People would probably answer differently in each instance.

      • Dmian@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        Well… I said VERY generally speaking. And as I’m defining a gradient of temperatures (clearly it’s not the same 30 °C than 38 °C), I’m also defining a gradient of “hot” sensations, from feeling a bit of heat in your body, to feeling like an oven. That’s the thing with generalizations. I’m not trying to be precise here, just give a general idea to those that are not used to Celsius (I’ve seen the same being done with Farenheit and found it useful). Cheers.