Conclusion

Noun

 * 1) The end, finish, close or last part of something.
 * 2) The outcome or result of a process or act.
 * 3) A decision reached after careful thought.
 * 4)  In a syllogism, the proposition that follows as a necessary consequence of the premises.

Adjectives for Conclusion
official; generalized; conducive; triumphant; intelligible; contemptuous; doubtful; still; strict; legitimate; practical; definite; inevitable; vile; languid; painful; speculative; spiritualistic; solid; meager; practiced; satisfactory; reasonable; brilliant; virtuous; lurid; adventurous; foregone; theoretic; suitable; logical;  compulsory; negative; ungracious; erroneous; murdering; palpable; bloody; humiliating; consolatory; dreary;   preliminary;  impotent; happy; sterile; demonstrated; scientific; auspicious; pregnant; valuable; horrible; devastating; despairing; portentous; irresistible; victorious; trivial; obvious; rational; abrupt; preposterous; statistical; ultimate; farcical; astonishing; surprising; fallacious; lame; subversive; opposite; tragic; hypothetical; critical; spooky; necessary; tricky; misleading.

Verbs for Conclusion
accept—; admit—; arrive at—; base—on bias—; bring to—; build—; carry to— confirm—; crown—; deduce—; delude— divine—; draw—; enunciate—; escape— establish—; formulate—; induce—; influence—; jump to—; lead to—; march to—; perceive—; prejudice—; reach—; refute—; reinforce—; seek—; set down—; shake—; shape—; strengthen—; substantiate—; support—; sustain—;  tolerate—;  weigh—; win—; —fades; —follows.

Related terms
conclude; conclusive; come to a conclusion

Thesaurus
climax, close, closing, closure, coda, codicil, cogent, colophon, common belief, community sentiment, compelling, completing, completion, conceit, concept, conception, conclusive, consensus gentium, consequence, consequent, consideration, consummation, continuance, continuation, convincing, corollary, crack of doom, creed, culmination, curtain, curtains, death, decease, deciding, decisive, declaration, deduction, definitive, denouement, derivation, descendant, desistance, destination, destiny, determinant, determinate, determination, determinative, dictum, doom, double take, dying words, dynasty, effect, end, end point, end result, ending, enunciation, envoi, epilogue, eschatology, estimate, estimation, ethos, expiration, eye, fate, feeling, final result, final solution, final twitch, final words, finale, finality, finis, finish, finishing, follow-through, follow-up, full development, general belief, goal, heir, idea, illation, impression, incontrovertible, induction, inference, ipse dixit, irrefragable, irrefutable, izzard, judgment, last, last act, last breath, last gasp, last things, last trumpet, last words, latter end, lights, line, lineage, manifesto, maturation, maturity, mind, mystique, notion, observation, offspring, omega, opinion, parting shot, payoff, perfection, period, peroration, personal judgment, point of view, popular belief, position, position paper, positive declaration, posterity, postface, postfix, postlude, postscript, posture, precise, predicate, predication, presumption, prevailing belief, proclamation, profession, pronouncement, proposition, protest, protestation, public belief, public opinion, quietus, ratiocination, reaction, refrain, resolution, resting place, ripeness, rounding off, rounding out, say, say-so, saying, sealing, second thought, sentiment, sequel, sequela, sequelae, sequelant, sequent, sequitur, settlement, sight, signature, signing, solemnization, stance, stand, statement, stop, stoppage, stopping place, subscript, successor, suffix, supplement, swan song, tag, telling, term, terminal, termination, terminus, theory, thinking, thought, topping off, unambiguous, unanswerable, utterance, view, vouch, way of thinking, windup, word

Etymology
From Old (and modern) French conclusion, or Latin conclusio, from the past participle stem of concludere ‘conclude’.

Translations

 * Bulgarian:, завършване,  приключване
 * Dutch: ,
 * German: ,
 * Italian: conclusione


 * Japanese: (, ketsumatsu),  (, musubi)
 * Kurdish:
 * Scottish Gaelic:


 * Bulgarian: извод,
 * Dutch: ,
 * Finnish: ,
 * German:


 * Italian: conclusione
 * Polish:, ,
 * Scottish Gaelic:


 * Bulgarian:
 * Czech:
 * Dutch: ,
 * Esperanto:
 * Finnish:, ,


 * German: Schlussfolgerung
 * Italian: conclusione
 * Japanese: (, ketsuron)
 * Russian:


 * Bulgarian:
 * Czech:
 * Dutch: logisch gevolg, conclusie


 * Finnish: ,
 * German: logische Schlussfolgerung, Vernunftsschluss , Folgerung
 * Japanese: (, ketsuron)

Etymology
Old French, from Latin conclusio, from the past participle stem of concludere ‘conclude’.

Noun

 * 1) conclusion

Related terms

 * conclure

Anagrams

 * concluions