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[ UK /kənklˈuːsɪv/ ]
[ US /kənˈkɫusɪv/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. forming an end or termination; especially putting an end to doubt or question
    conclusive proof
    the evidence is conclusive

How To Use conclusive In A Sentence

  • Clearly a good deal more research needs to be done before there are any conclusive answers. Alternative Health Care for Women
  • They can't say conclusively he's not alive, and the presumption is they must aggressively pursue every avenue of this case. Scott Speicher
  • The country has been in a state of anarchy since the inconclusive election.
  • Its inconclusiveness demonstrated its futility.
  • So the evidence here is inconclusive. Times, Sunday Times
  • Her attorneys claim there is no conclusive evidence that any murders took place.
  • Anyway, as has already been stated and will now be seen, the evidence of his coins conclusively shows that the God to whom Constantine from first to last attributed his victories, was -- the Sun-God. The Non-Christian Cross An Enquiry into the Origin and History of the Symbol Eventually Adopted as That of Our Religion
  • Plus, a fair bit of the scientific research is inconclusive. The Sun
  • It is now pretty conclusively established that they are no more Japanese than they are of any other country in particular, but that the originators of the breed were common fancy mice which were suffering from a disease of the brain analogous to the 'gid' in sheep. The Dancing Mouse A Study in Animal Behavior
  • Nonetheless, conclusive evidence about a treatment's effectiveness is rarely found in a single study. Quick Study: Yoga may help ease the debilitating symptoms of fibromyalgia
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