well it's quite simple... read the book
In Fahrenheit 451, kerosene is a flammable liquid used by firefighters to start fires instead of putting them out. The government in the novel has turned books into forbidden items, so firemen are tasked with burning all books they find.
In Fahrenheit 451, Montag says he smells like kerosene because he is a fireman who burns books. The kerosene is used to start the fires that destroy the forbidden literature.
A form of dialect in "Fahrenheit 451" is the use of unusual and invented words by the characters, such as "kerosene" being used to describe burning books. This unique language reflects the oppressive and dehumanizing society depicted in the novel.
to burn things at a faster rate.
Tits
It means you are against the state.
451 degrees Fahrenheit
I know that paper combusts at 451 deg fahrenheit.
Fahrenheit 451 is the heat at which paper burns
One example of a metaphor in Fahrenheit 451 before page 31 is the comparison of burning books to “pouring kerosene” on the mind of society, implying that the act of censorship destroys knowledge and intellectual growth.
451 degrees Fahrenheit, as the movie title reminds you.
The title of Fahrenheit 451 is Fahrenheit 451. The shorter version of the story was called "The Fireman", which was the basis for Fahrenheit 451. The reason why this book was entitled Fahrenheit 451 is because the temperature in which books burn is Fahrenheit 451.
It is explained in Bradbury's introduction to the novel. A literary license was taken by Ray Bradbury when he named "Fahrenheit 451" (novel, 1953) after the temperature at which paper ignites (the range is about 218°-246°C or 424-474°F).