Science, asked by himankumarshau, 7 months ago

opening the door he went out. make two sentences from this sentence​

Answers

Answered by ningthoujambrojen202
0

Answer:

A car came and kidnapped him. He loided for helping but no one heard

Answered by Anonymous
0

Answer:

The main grammatical issue is whether the past participle ‘opened’ can be used as an adjective in the same way that other past participles are commonly used, e.g. “The door is closed,” “The streets are all plowed,” and “Her toy is broken.” As a rule, no. We use the adjective ‘open.’ The past participle ‘opened’ will normally be found only in passive voice constructions, e.g. “The door is opened by electronic sensors and motors.”

Now, ‘unopened’ is common enough, e.g. “The package is still unopened,” and there are a few cases where ‘opened’ might be used in particular circumstances, e.g. “An opened letter lay on the table.” This is because an ‘open letter’ is something else, a letter whose contents have been published openly.

I’m going to divide the question into four:

Which sentence would a native English speaker use to describe a door? Answer: Everybody would say, “The door is open.”

Would anyone ever say, “The door is opened”? Answer: Probably not, but if the door had been closed recently and were now open, someone might say, “The door has been opened.” That’s in the passive voice.

Is “The door is opened” grammatically correct? Answer: Yes, but nobody would ever say it without a ‘by’ phrase (see above) in normal circumstances.

Why do we use a past participle in “The door is closed” and “The door is shut” but an adjective in “The door is open”? Answer: I don’t know. Someone would have to do an analysis of usage over the centuries. That ain’t gonna be me. Don’t worry about it.

Explanation:

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