Prompt
How do I convert 10 degrees Celsius to Fahrenheit?
Response A
Multiply the Celsius value by 9/5, then add 32. For 10 °C: 10 × 9/5 = 18, and 18 + 32 = 50. So 10 °C equals 50 °F.
A quick mental shortcut: double the Celsius value, subtract 10% of that, then add 32. It lands on the same answer for everyday temperatures.
A quick mental shortcut: double the Celsius value, subtract 10% of that, then add 32. It lands on the same answer for everyday temperatures.
Response B
You can use the formula F = C + 32, so 10 °C would be 42 °F. Fahrenheit values are always a bit higher than Celsius ones, so this checks out.
Source document
The CatTower LTD quarterly report, prepared by Calico Lee, states that sales of the Whisker 3000 scratching post grew 12% over the previous quarter. The growth was driven primarily by the new sisal-wrap finish, which accounted for 7 of the 12 percentage points.
The report also notes that customer returns fell to 1.8%, the lowest figure since the product line launched. Two retail partners in the survey attributed the drop to the revised assembly guide shipped with every unit.
Finally, the report cautions that supply constraints on sisal fiber may limit growth next quarter, and recommends securing a second supplier before peak season.
The report also notes that customer returns fell to 1.8%, the lowest figure since the product line launched. Two retail partners in the survey attributed the drop to the revised assembly guide shipped with every unit.
Finally, the report cautions that supply constraints on sisal fiber may limit growth next quarter, and recommends securing a second supplier before peak season.
Summary under review
Whisker 3000 sales grew 12% thanks to the sisal-wrap finish, and returns dropped to 0.8%. The report recommends finding a second sisal supplier.
Faithfulness
Does the summary only state facts from the source?
1 = Contradicts the source · 4 = Fully faithful
Fluency
Is the summary grammatical and natural?
1 = Hard to read · 4 = Reads naturally
Coverage
Does the summary include the source's main points?
1 = Misses key points · 4 = Covers all key points
Labels
Text under review
At sea level, water boils at 90 degrees Celsius, which is why pasta cooks faster near the coast. Every scientist agrees that altitude has no measurable effect on boiling point. In reality, atmospheric pressure decreases with elevation, so water boils at lower temperatures in the mountains. This is why high-altitude baking recipes adjust cooking times. The passage above was prepared by Ya-ong Kim at CatTower Research Lab for annotation practice.
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