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opening
[ oh-puh-ning ]
noun
- an act or instance of making or becoming open:
The opening of the tomb gathered much publicity.
Antonyms: closing
- the act of a person or thing that opens:
Her opening of the ceremony was brilliantly handled.
- an unobstructed or unoccupied space or place:
That narrow opening between buildings is a good place to shelter from the rain.
- a void in solid matter; a gap, hole, or aperture:
There was a little opening in the door they used as a peephole.
Synonyms: rent, fissure, cleft, chasm, rift, breach, slit, orifice
- a tract of land thinly wooded as compared with adjoining forest tracts.
- the act of beginning; start; commencement:
Tomorrow is the opening of a new session of Congress.
- the first part or initial stage of anything:
During the opening, the store had extra late hours.
- an employment vacancy; an unfilled position or job:
There are no openings for waitstaff at the moment.
- an opportunity; chance.
- a formal or official beginning, as of a sport season or a season's sale of goods:
Today marks the opening of the deer-hunting season.
Swimsuits sold well at the summer opening.
- the first performance of a theatrical production.
- the first public showing or use of something:
It's rare for there to be so many journalists at the opening of an art exhibition.
- a celebration of the first public showing or performance or of the first use or start of something:
The new supermarket is going to give away prizes at its opening.
- Law. the statement of the case made by counsel to the court or jury preliminary to adducing evidence.
- a mode of beginning a game:
a manual of chess openings.
adjective
- first, inaugural, commencing, or beginning:
The opening chapter of the book caught my attention immediately.
opening
/ ˈəʊpənɪŋ /
noun
- the act of making or becoming open
- a vacant or unobstructed space, esp one that will serve as a passageway; gap
- a tract in a forest in which trees are scattered or absent
- the first part or stage of something
- the first performance of something, esp a theatrical production
- ( as modifier )
the opening night
- a specific or formal sequence of moves at the start of any of certain games, esp chess or draughts
- an opportunity or chance, esp for employment or promotion in a business concern
- law the preliminary statement made by counsel to the court or jury before adducing evidence in support of his case
Other Words From
- pre·o·pen·ing adjective
- self-o·pen·ing adjective
- un·o·pen·ing adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of opening1
Example Sentences
The league switched its format to a best-of-seven finals this year and the opening round will go to a 1-1-1 format with the worse seeded team hosting Game 2.
Diffractive robotics connects, for the first time, untethered robots with imaging techniques that depend on visible light diffraction -- the bending of a light wave when it passes through an opening or around something.
President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine was particularly critical, warning that Mr. Scholz’s phone call risked opening “a Pandora’s box” by encouraging more leaders to engage with Mr. Putin, ultimately legitimizing the Russian president’s position.
On opening day of the exhibition, a nude model in his late 40s clambered on each ceramic sculpture and struck a series of poses — kneeling, sprawling, walking in what West calls a “strut” pose.
“In the opening scene of the show, in the forefront you can actually see an electrical truck pulling away,” Brozino said.
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