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FAQs · Serving Persecuted Christians Worldwide - Open Doors U. S If you established your monthly gift prior to 2023 and you wish to continue to support projects from Open Doors—the ministry started when Brother Andrew began smuggling Bibles in 1955–this will not happen automatically You will need to call us at 1-800-896-5285 or email us at info@opendoosus org to reinstate your monthly gift to Open Doors
The 2025 World Watch List - Open Doors U. S In Open Doors’ World Watch List top 50 alone, 310m Christians face very high or extreme levels Explore the country profiles to find information, stories and prayers for each of the countries, along with ways that you can stand with your persecuted church family in prayer and action More about the World Watch List
Opened vs open? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange "Open" as an adjective conveys the state of an object while its verb counterpart indicates the action of opening So in your example, Is the door open? refers to the state of the door which is not closed Is the door opened? can be interpreted as the passive form of the verb open Here, we are asking if the door is moved from the closed
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
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
word choice - What do you say for opening a door rapidly? - English . . . You can throw the door open She ran through the dark anteroom, she threw the door open and looked out It depends on the context, but either of them can imply force, speed, sudden movement There are a few mentions of tearing the door open, but most of them are used in the sense of breaking it, ripping it off, getting past it