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8 answers

Nonsense question posted repeatedly having no meaning without a context. The most likely answer would be -32F - twice as far below freezing.

2007-03-27 07:50:54 · answer #1 · answered by Mike1942f 7 · 0 0

There is no answer to this. Everyone is stuck on the 0 and which scale. You have to look at the sentence. "as" means =. Tomorrow is going to be twice as cold. Tomorrow = 2 * cold. What is cold. It's a variable. If you would state yesterday was 10 degrees then your answer would be -20 degrees. If you would state yesterday was 20 degrees then your answer would be -40 degrees. Therefore the answer could not be 0 as a lot of people say. If that was the case then no statement prior to the question should change the absolute answer. On another approach, a car is at the 10 mile marker and tomorrow has to go twice as far. What mile marker is the designation? If you say 30, then your assuming the car started at 0 downtown. But what if the house was at the 5 mile marker. Then it would be 20. Cold is a variable. And you can't get an absolute answer when you have a variable in the equation.

2007-03-29 19:15:14 · answer #2 · answered by krys2fur 1 · 0 0

You shouldn't get thrown off by the 0 degrees F reading. Remember, there are other temperature scales like Celsius or the Absolute Kelvin scale.
Change 0 degress F to Celsius and see that it is -16.7 degrees celcius. Twice as cold would be -33.4 degrees Celcius.
Change this back to F degrees.

2007-03-27 08:14:07 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Well that depends on how much of a smart *ss one wants to be. The first thing that popped into my head was, what was the temperature yesterday? Is tomorrow going to drop the same number of degrees as it did from yesterday? Then that could be your answer.
But my personal favorite answer for you today is that 'tomorrow' never comes. haha!

2007-03-27 09:19:55 · answer #4 · answered by theoriginalmichelambo 2 · 0 0

32 degrees below 0 Fahrenheit if you want to know

2007-03-27 09:20:18 · answer #5 · answered by insane 6 · 0 0

I'd use the Kelvin scale, which measures above absolute zero, no heat at all. So Zero F is 459.4 on the Kelvin scale, half of that is 230.3 on the Kelvin scale, which is -230.4 deg F, which is colder than a witch's t!t.

2007-03-27 09:24:57 · answer #6 · answered by Alf W 5 · 0 0

cold as a polar bears bum!

2007-03-27 08:26:45 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Not this one again !

2007-03-27 08:19:40 · answer #8 · answered by Gene 7 · 0 0

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