Touting the motto, "Today a reader, tomorrow a leader," CDP views dictionaries as perhaps the first and most powerful reference and active educational tool that a child should own Dedicated to improving literacy in California's public schools one child at a time, CDP works with volunteer organizations and individuals to distribute free dictionaries annually to third graders during classroom visits As funding for the organization grows, CDP will expand to the rest of the San Francisco Bay Area and beyond
You use why at the beginning of a clause in which you talk about the reasons for something. He still could not throw any further light on why the elevator could have become jammed Experts wonder why the US government is not taking similarly strong actions against AIDS in this country I can't understand why they don't want us. Why is also an adverb. I don't know why It's obvious why Here's why
The reason or cause for which; that on account of which; on what account; as, I know not why he left town so suddenly; used as a compound relative
For what cause, reason, or purpose; on what account; wherefore; used interrogatively
the cause or intention underlying an action or situation, especially in the phrase `the whys and wherefores' question word; what is the reason (`how come' is a nonstandard variant); "why are you here?"; "how come he got an ice cream cone but I didn't?