This depends on what you are burning, but in general, you are consuming oxygen (from the atmosphere) and whatever the fuel is (wood, candle wax, gasoline, whatever) and you are producing carbon dioxide, water vapor, and "soot", which is primarily carbon with other elements that will vary by the fuels being consumed.
chemical reaction
No. Burning is sometimes a reversible change, as when hydrogen is burned, and it always produces a new compound(s).
They are similar because you are producing a chemical change in both, making new substances.
Burning wood is a chemical change - although, like most chemical changes it is accompanied by a physical change. Usually we reserve the term physical changes for things like erosion, melting, or evaporation where no change in composition occurs.
The atoms rearrange and the new bonds form to make the new substances.
These substances are called products.
To obtain new substances a chemical reaction is needed.
It depends , how many are produced .
Neon is an element, classified as a noble gas, and it has nothing to do with burning wood. Neon does not burn, nor is it produced by burning.
chemical reaction
The new substances formed during a chemical reaction are called Products.
No. Burning is sometimes a reversible change, as when hydrogen is burned, and it always produces a new compound(s).
Metabolites or Products.
They are similar because you are producing a chemical change in both, making new substances.
Burning is a chemical change, and as such, produces new forms of matter that were not there before. These new substances are called products, and in the case of burning, or combustion, they are often water vapor and carbon dioxide.
Products.
It's a chemical change because new substances are formed.