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Actually, more than 90% of the world is on metric system:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/ab/Metric_system_adoption_map.svg/2000px-Metric_system_adoption_map.svg.png
T(°F) = T(°C) × 1.8 + 32
It's not hard though. Under 0 = cold
Above 0 = slightly less cold
30 - warm
Higher than 30 - Pretty hot
Lower than 0 - Pretty cold
Sorry that America doesn't like to use a standardised system of measurement like literally everywhere else in the world.
Celsius is calibrated based on the phase change of water. 0 = freezing, 100 = boiling. Great for sciences, but in relation to body it’s pretty poor. A few degree difference is huge on how it feels to us.
Why these couldn't have been separated from what is considered the metric system I don't know. Metric is more about the use of prefix (mega, kilo, centi, mili,etc..) and base 10 scale measurements(meter, liter, pascals, volts, ohms,etc.) , which Celsius doesn't use at all.
00 ºC: water freezes
25 ºC: ambient temperature (77 ºF)
37 ºC: human body temperature
100ºC: water boils
Sorry, but I really have trouble with the metric system. Maybe because it's not the one I learnt.