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The 2024 World Watch List - Open Doors U. S The 2024 World Watch List The World Watch List is Open Doors’ annual ranking of the 50 countries where Christians face the most extreme persecution In this year's list, we see both the horrors of persecution—and the extravagance of God's grace: There are several ways to learn more about persecution and the 2024 World Watch List
Opened vs open? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange 7 Open does not refer to any past event, while opened does Both refer to the same current state, but opened opens the door to an earlier narrative, if you will The door was once closed*, and someone or something changed it The use of opened indicates a larger history for the object that open entirely ignores
grammar - Door is opened vs Door is open vs Door open - English . . . If the door is opened, the alarm will sound Note that, for some verbs, the past participle has the same form as the corresponding adjective, for example broken You can't assume that something that looks like a past participle after is, actually is a past participle door is open Here, open is used as an predicative adjective - after the
Are they the same in meaning, the open door and the opened door? Open is an adjective Opened is a past participle used as a modifier The difference in meaning is that open is in contrast to not open The door could have been open for ten years or a century It could always be open Opened expands to The "having been opened" door This refers to the action of the door having been opened
Why do we use open and closed instead of opened and closed So open has had the adjectival meaning longer than it has been used as a verb In the case of close , though it seems to come ultimately from a Latin adjective (past participle clausum ), within English (and the French we got it from) it was primarily a verb, and so the derived closed came into use
Open the doors to at for - English Language Learners Stack Exchange "Open (the) doors at " is incorrect unless you are talking about a time and a literal door e g "I open the doors at 10 O'clock Or a location and literal door: e g "I open the door at the end of the corridor" Do not use this for your example "Open the door to " - For your example sentence this is the correct choice
Verb for just opening a bit a window or door to prop (open) Merriam Webster: Definition 2 I agree that crack is better, but this was my first thought Implies the use of a helper object like a doorstop He propped the window open so that a light breeze could come in The door was not totally closed Someone had propped it open