“With Your Eyes Closed” vs “With Closed Eyes” | English Participle Construction Explained
Pay attention to the construction «with your eyes closed». This is a very common and convenient phrase! Instead of the long «and your eyes are closed», we speak briefly and succinctly: «with + object + participle». More examples: «He stood there with his mouth open», «She left with the door unlocked».
What is more important: «closed» and «tired» are not past tense verbs, but participles (Past Participle). This often causes confusion. Yes, in English, *-ed* is not always a verb ending.


