1. issuing - Noun
2. issuing - Verb
of Issue
Source: Webster's dictionaryFirst, we must stop issuing drivers' licenses to people in our country illegally. Providing them with forms of government identification makes a mockery of our laws and undermines national security efforts. Bobby Jindal
Only the freedom of mind can prevent the state from becoming totalitarian and from issuing totalitarian demands. Friedrich Dürrenmatt
Dressing with style is akin to issuing a manifesto; dressing fashionably is like signing a petition. Jani Allan
Between issuing laws prohibiting discrimination against transgendered individuals and running up a $38 billion deficit, the California Legislature mandated a three-week immersion course in Islam for all seventh-graders. Ann Coulter
I cannot teach my art, nor the art of any school whatever, since I deny that art can be taught, or, in other words, I maintain that art is completely individual, and is, for each artist, nothing but the talent issuing from his own inspiration and his own studies of tradition. Gustave Courbet
Two principles, according to the Settembrinian cosmogony, were in perpetual conflict for possession of the world: force and justice, tyranny and freedom, superstition and knowledge; the law of permanence and the law of change, of ceaseless fermentation issuing in progress. Thomas Mann