A guilty charge.
your butt
There was a serious issue on 2nd street this morning.
Federalists wanted to stop political opposition
well, if you publish something, its like you're issuing it, so maybe, issue. For example, the sentence, The company specialized in the publication of books, would be the same if you used the word issuing: The company specialized in the issuing of books. Tell me if i'm right!!:)
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.
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").
There was a crash at the intersection. For this reason, we were late to school.
You would not use 'reason out' as a phrase in a sentence, the juxtaposition of those to words together is not good English.
One reason is raise capital for a company without sacrificing the control of company. Issuing common stock would do this.
Imperative sentences are used for issuing commands or orders."She steals a base" is a declarative sentence--it simply states a fact. The following is an example of an imperative sentence:Steal a base!
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."