how they met
Montag asks Millie about their past before they met, specifically wanting to know why they got married and what attracted her to him. He is trying to understand the emptiness in their relationship and his own feelings.
where they first met
Clarisse has been dead for four days when Millie informs Montag in the book "Fahrenheit 451" by Ray Bradbury.
Montag asked this question to prompt Millie to think about whether she truly feels a deep, meaningful connection with the characters on the TV shows she constantly watches. He is trying to highlight the superficial nature of her relationships with these fictional characters compared to the emptiness she may be feeling in her real life.
Montag shows Millie books, which are forbidden in their society because they challenge the status quo and encourage critical thinking. He hopes to awaken her curiosity and make her question the oppressive system they live in.
If you're talking about Fahrenheit 451 then they hardly interact with each other. Millie is just self-centered and stubborn.
How DARE you ask such a personal question about me!!
When Montag says they are heading for the cliff, he is expressing his concern that their society is on a dangerous path towards self-destruction. He is worried that people are becoming disconnected from reality and are losing their sense of humanity, which is leading them towards a societal "cliff" of ignorance and oppression.
yes oh and while you at it why not ask where millie is shes upstairs i think
Montag asks Mildred if she remembers what happened the previous night, indicating that he wants to discuss her overdose on sleeping pills and her attempted suicide.
Montag does not let Millie shoo the dog at their front door because he believes that the dog is a manifestation of their society's collective detachment and desensitization to violence, and that killing the dog would just be a temporary solution to a much larger problem. He sees the dog as a symbol of their society's issues, and feels that addressing the root of the problem is more important than dealing with the symptoms.
The past tense of the verb "ask" is "asked."
The past simple of "to ask" is "asked."
The past tense of "ask" is "asked."