open

Предложения
An user
The   Town Hall   is   open   to the   public   and   may   be   visited .

Ратуша открыта для публики и может быть посещена.

An user
He
👨
  waited   patiently   for   the   merchant   to   awaken   and   open   the   shop .

Он терпеливо ждал, пока торговец пробудится и откроет магазин.

An user
Vendors   work   hard   to   turn   open   standards   into   franchise   standards .

Продавцы усердно работают, чтобы превратить открытые стандарты в стандарты франшизы.

An user
The   large   antenna   had   failed   to   open   fully   after   receiving   commands   from   inside   Mir .

Большая антенна не смогла полностью открыть после получения команд изнутри Мир.

An user
The   diver   forced   open   the   oyster
🦪
revealing   a
🅰️
  shimmering   pearl .

Дайвер заставил открыть устрицу, раскрывая мерцающую жемчужину.

Значение (Английский)

Частота

A1
Произносится как (IPA)
/ˈəʊp(ə)n/
Этимология (Английский)

In summary

Adjective from Middle English open, from Old English open (“open”), from Proto-West Germanic *opan, from Proto-Germanic *upanaz (“open”), from Proto-Indo-European *upo (“up from under, over”). Cognates * Scots apen (“open”) * Saterland Frisian eepen (“open”) * West Frisian iepen (“open”) * Dutch open (“open”) * Low German open, apen (“open”) * German offen (“open”) * Danish åben (“open”) * Swedish öppen (“open”) * Norwegian Bokmål åpen (“open”) * Norwegian Nynorsk open (“open”) * Icelandic opinn (“open”) Compare also Latin supinus (“on one's back, supine”), Albanian hap (“to open”). Related to up. Verb from Middle English openen, from Old English openian (“to open”), from Proto-West Germanic *opanōn, from Proto-Germanic *upanōną (“to raise; lift; open”), from Proto-Germanic *upanaz (“open”, adjective). Cognate with Saterland Frisian eepenje (“to open”), West Frisian iepenje (“to open”), Dutch openen (“to open”), German öffnen (“to open”), Danish åbne (“to open”), Swedish öppna (“to open”), Norwegian Bokmål åpne (“to open”), Norwegian Nynorsk and Icelandic opna (“to open”). Related to English up. Noun from Middle English open (“an aperture or opening”), from the verb. In the sports sense, however, a shortening of “open competition”.

Notes

Sign in to write sticky notes