A pair of balls
during the manhunt for Montag by the hound, the camera identifies an innocent man as Montag because the hound had lost Montag. (Montag's disguise worked) In order to please the people watching the manhunt on television they killed a man but didn't get close enough to him with the camera for anybody to realize that it wasn't Montag.
Heidi Montag's boyfriend
A last thing in a sentence
Yes, tatoo's damage your skin because it can damage your skin with the sharp needle and it can make your skin go red and you could start itching it and it burns.
Im pretty sure to Faber's house, then to the railroad where he meets Granger.
montag burns beatty with the flame thrower and kills him and the others!!
Fahrenheit 451 is the temperature at which paper burns.
Guy Montag is the protagonist. He is a fireman. He burns books
Montag thought that it might be werid because books wasnt important to them it was their jod.
Montag wears the number 451 on his helmet in Fahrenheit 451. The number signifies the temperature at which book paper burns.
Montag
Montag burns the Black family along with their home as ordered by his fire chief, Captain Beatty, since possessing and reading books is illegal in their society.
Captain Beatty tells Montag to burn his own house down as punishment for hoarding books and defying the law. Beatty explains that Montag must prove his loyalty to the fire department by destroying the books himself.
Montag burned a collection of books, a woman named Mrs. Blake, himself, and ultimately the entire city with the bombing at the end of the novel.
In Ray Bradbury's novel "Fahrenheit 451," Montag first burns a pile of books in his possession after being influenced by a young woman who chooses to burn herself along with her books rather than surrender them to the authorities.
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.
As readers see it in "Fahrenheit 451," Montag's dilemma revolves around his inner conflict with the oppressive society that burns books and suppresses free thought. However, Montag's own perspective evolves from initially accepting the status quo to ultimately rebelling against it as he starts questioning the purpose and value of his existence and relationships in the world of censorship.