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Opened

Opened is the past tense and past participle of the verb open. It indicates that something that was closed or sealed has been moved to an accessible state, or that an action related to beginning operation has occurred. In everyday language, opened is used with objects that can be physically opened, such as doors, boxes, or files, as in “The door was opened by the staff” or “She opened the document.” While opened appears in past contexts, the adjective form more often used to describe a state is open, as in “the open window.”

Etymology and form: opened derives from the verb open, which comes from Old English openian (to open)

Usage notes: opened is common in transitive constructions (someone opened something) and in passive voice (something

See also: open, opening ceremony, opening (as a noun), have opened.

and
is
related
to
the
Old
French
ouvrir
via
Latin
aperire.
The
standard
English
past
tense
and
past
participle
are
formed
with
the
regular
-ed
ending,
yielding
opened.
The
word
has
long
been
used
in
both
literal
and
figurative
senses
to
indicate
causation
of
access
or
commencement.
was
opened).
It
also
appears
in
fixed
expressions
like
opened
for
business
or
opened
with
a
ceremony,
where
it
signals
the
start
of
an
activity
or
service.
In
modern
computing,
files
and
programs
can
be
opened,
and
“opened”
often
appears
in
logs
or
messages
describing
user
actions.
The
related
idiom
open
up
conveys
broader
meanings
such
as
revealing
information
or
becoming
more
communicative.