so what's yours?
Discernible means able to be perceived by a sense or by the mind. An example of how to use discernible in a sentence is, there is no real discernible reason why bad things happen to good people.
Both are correct, in different context and with different sentence structure. For example: For this reason she left early; but This is the reason why she left early.
i do believe that most of the things happen for a reason...
The sentence "That was the reason why he came late" is a complex sentence, as it contains an independent clause ("That was the reason") and a dependent clause ("why he came late").
The sentence "People visit Yosemite because it is so beautiful" contains both an independent clause and a dependent clause. The independent clause is "People visit Yosemite," as it can stand alone as a complete thought. The dependent clause is "because it is so beautiful," which cannot stand alone and provides additional information about the reason for the visit.
Things Happen for a Reason was created on 2007-09-05.
With Thats the end hope you enjoyed it
You would not use 'reason out' as a phrase in a sentence, the juxtaposition of those to words together is not good English.
The first is to describe why something HAD TO happen. The second is to describe why something DID happen. Just "the reason" is what it is, and it can be used in three different ways. You used two of them in your question
The only reason that this sentence is not incomprehensible is because it has been plagiarized.
A sentence for the word "dubbed" would be: It was for this reason that he was dubbed "The Stinker."
reason means logical thinking.