conclude

[ kuh n-klood ]
/ kənˈklud /

verb (used with object), con·clud·ed, con·clud·ing.

verb (used without object), con·clud·ed, con·clud·ing.

to come to an end; finish: The meeting concluded at ten o'clock.
to arrive at an opinion or judgment; come to a decision; decide: The jury concluded to set the accused free.

Origin of conclude

1250–1300; Middle English < Latin conclūdere to close, end an argument, equivalent to con- con- + -clūdere, combining form of claudere to close

OTHER WORDS FROM conclude

Example sentences from the Web for unconcluded

  • This is actually shown by the fact that measurement proves to be an unconcluded and inconcludable operation.

    Natural Philosophy |Wilhelm Ostwald
  • The Consul (or Vice-Consul) who took us for a drive told us a thrilling tale—as yet unconcluded—of two rival families.

    Fifty-One Years of Victorian Life |Margaret Elizabeth Leigh Child-Villiers, Countess of Jersey
  • Cash in consideration of an unconcluded marriage; that was how it read.

    Stella Fregelius |H. Rider Haggard

British Dictionary definitions for unconcluded

conclude
/ (kənˈkluːd) /

verb (mainly tr)

(also intr) to come or cause to come to an end or conclusion
(takes a clause as object) to decide by reasoning; deduce the judge concluded that the witness had told the truth
to arrange finally; settle to conclude a treaty; it was concluded that he should go
obsolete to confine

Derived forms of conclude

concluder, noun

Word Origin for conclude

C14: from Latin conclūdere to enclose, end, from claudere to close