English-Thai Dictionary
conclude
VI จบ สรุป job
conclude
VT ตัดสินใจ determine decide tad-sin-jai
conclude
VT ทำให้ จบ สรุป finish up end close tam-hai-job
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
CONCLUDE
v.t.[L., to shut; Gr. , contracted. The sense is to stop, make fast, shut, or rather to thrust together. Hence in Latin, claudo signifies to halt, or limp, that is, to stop, as well as to shut. See Lid. ] 1. To shut.
The very person of Christ--was only, touching bodily substance, concluded in the grave. [This use of the word is uncommon. ]
2. To include; to comprehend.
For God hath concluded them all in unbelief. Romans 11:32.
The scripture hath concluded all under sin. Galatians 3:22.
The meaning of the word in the latter passage may be to declare irrevocably or to doom.
3. To collect by reasoning; to infer, as from premises; to close an argument by inferring.
Therefore we conclude, that a man is justified by faith without the deeds of the law. Romans 3:28.
4. To decide; to determine; to make a final judgment or determination.
As touching the Gentiles who believe, we have written and concluded that they observe no such thing. Acts 21:25.
5. To end; to finish.
I will conclude this part with the sppech of a counselor of state.
6. To stop or restrain, or as in law, to estop from further argument or proceedings; to oblige or bind, as by authority or by ones own argument or concession; generally in the passive.
If they will appeal to revelation for their creation, they must be concluded by it.
The defendant is concluded by his own plea.
I do not consider the decision of that motion, upon affidavits, to amount to a res judicata, which ought to conclude the present inquiry.
CONCLUDE
v.i. 1. To infer, as a consequence; to determine.
The world will conclude I had a guilty conscience.
But this verb is really transitive. The world will conclude that I ahd a guilty conscience--that is here the object, referring to the subsequent clause of the sentence. [See Verb Transitive, No. 3.]
2. To settle opinion; to form a final judgment.
Can we conclude upon Luthers instability, as our author has done.
3. To end.
A train of lies, that, made in lust, conclude in perjuries.
The old form of expression, to conclude of, is no longer in use.
CONCLUDED
pp. Shut; ended; finished; determined; inferred; comprehended; stopped, or bound.
CONCLUDENCY
n.Inference; logical deducation from premises.
CONCLUDENT
a.Bringing to a close; decisive.
CONCLUDER
n.One who concludes.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
CONCLUDE
Con *clude ", v. t. [imp. & p. p. Concluded; p. pr. & vb. n.Concluding. ] Etym: [L. concludere, conclusum; con- + claudere to shut. See Close, v. t.]
1. To shut up; to inclose. [Obs. ] The very person of Christ [was ] concluded within the grave. Hooker.
2. To include; to comprehend; to shut up together; to embrace. [Obs. ] For God hath concluded all in unbelief. Rom. xi. 32. The Scripture hath concluded all under sin. Gal. iii. 22.
3. To reach as an end of reasoning; to infer, as from premises; to close, as an argument, by inferring; -- sometimes followed by a dependent clause. No man can conclude God's love or hatred to any person by anything that befalls him. Tillotson. Therefore we conclude that a man is justified by faith. Rom. iii. 28.
4. To make a final determination or judgment concerning; to judge; to decide. But no frail man, however great or high, Can be concluded blest before he die. Addison. Is it concluded he shall be protector Shak.
5. To bring to an end; to close; to finish. I will conclude this part with the speech of a counselor of state. Bacon.
6. To bring about as a result; to effect; to make; as, to conclude a bargain. "If we conclude a peace. " Shak.
7. To shut off; to restrain; to limit; to estop; to bar; -- generally in the passive; as, the defendant is concluded by his own plea; a judgment concludes the introduction of further evidence argument. If therefore they will appeal to revelation for their creation they must be concluded by it. Sir M. Hale.
Syn. -- To infer; decide; determine; settle; close; finish; terminate; end.
CONCLUDE
CONCLUDE Con *clude ", v. i.
1. To come to a termination; to make an end; to close; to end; to terminate. A train of lies, That, made in lust, conclude in perjuries. Dryden. And, to conclude, The victory fell on us. Shak.
2. To form a final judgment; to reach a decision. Can we conclude upon Luther's instability Bp. Atterbury. Conclude and be agreed. Shak.
CONCLUDENCY
CONCLUDENCY Con *clud "en *cy, n.
Defn: Deduction from premises; inference; conclusion. [Obs. ] Sir M. Hale.
CONCLUDENT
Con *clud "ent, a. Etym: [L. concludens, p. pr. ]
Defn: Bringing to a close; decisive; conclusive. [Obs. ] Arguments highly consequential and concludent to my purpose. Sir M. Hale.
CONCLUDER
CONCLUDER Con *clud "er, n.
Defn: One who concludes.
New American Oxford Dictionary
conclude
con clude |kənˈklo͞od kənˈklud | ▶verb 1 [ with obj. ] bring (something ) to an end: they conclude their study with these words | [ no obj. ] : we concluded by singing carols. • [ no obj. ] come to an end: the talk concluded with slides. • formally and finally settle or arrange (a treaty or agreement ): an attempt to conclude a ceasefire. 2 arrive at a judgment or opinion by reasoning: the doctors concluded that Esther had suffered a stroke | what do you conclude from all this? • say in conclusion: “It's a wicked old world, ” she concluded. • [ with infinitive ] dated decide to do something: I concluded to go without his knowledge. ORIGIN Middle English (in the sense ‘convince ’): from Latin concludere, from con- ‘completely ’ + claudere ‘to shut. ’
Oxford Dictionary
conclude
con |clude |kənˈkluːd | ▶verb 1 bring or come to an end: [ with obj. ] : they conclude their study with these words | [ no obj. ] : the talk concluded with slides. • [ with obj. ] formally and finally settle or arrange (an agreement ): an attempt to conclude a ceasefire. 2 [ with clause ] arrive at a judgement or opinion by reasoning: the doctors concluded that Esther had suffered a stroke | what do you conclude from all this? • [ with direct speech ] say in conclusion: ‘It's a wicked old world, ’ she concluded. • [ with infinitive ] US dated decide to do something: we found some bread, which we concluded to eat. PHRASES conclude missives Scots Law (of a buyer ) sign a contract with the vendor of a property or piece of land to signify change of ownership. ORIGIN Middle English (in the sense ‘convince ’): from Latin concludere, from con- ‘completely ’ + claudere ‘to shut ’.
American Oxford Thesaurus
conclude
conclude verb 1 the meeting concluded at ten: finish, end, draw to a close, be over, stop, cease. ANTONYMS commence, start, begin. 2 she concluded the press conference: bring to an end, close, wind up, terminate, dissolve; informal wrap up. ANTONYMS open, start, begin. 3 an attempt to conclude a ceasefire: negotiate, broker, agree, come to terms on, settle, clinch, finalize, tie up; bring about, arrange, effect, engineer; informal sew up. 4 I concluded that he was rather unpleasant: deduce, infer, gather, judge, decide, conjecture, surmise, extrapolate, figure, reckon.
Oxford Thesaurus
conclude
conclude verb 1 the meeting concluded at 9 o'clock: finish, end, come to an end, draw to a close, wind up, be over, stop, terminate, close, cease; culminate. ANTONYMS start, begin, commence. 2 he concluded the press conference with another announcement about welfare reform: bring to an end, bring to a close, finish, close, wind up, terminate, dissolve; round off; informal wrap up; dated put a period to. ANTONYMS start, begin, open. 3 an attempt to conclude a ceasefire: negotiate, reach an agreement on, agree, come to terms on, reach terms on, broker, settle, seal, set the seal on, clinch, finalize, tie up, complete, shake hands on, close, bring about, arrange, effect, engineer, accomplish, establish, resolve, work out, pull off, bring off, thrash out, hammer out; informal sew up, swing, button up. 4 from this letter, one can only conclude that he was a rather unpleasant man: come to the conclusion, deduce, infer, draw the inference, gather, judge, decide; assume, presume, suppose, conjecture, surmise; N. Amer. figure; informal reckon; archaic collect.
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
conclude
con clude /kənklúːd /〖con (完全に )clude (閉じる )〗(名 )conclusion 動詞 ~s /-dz /; ~d /-ɪd /; -cluding ⦅主に書 ⦆他動詞 1 〖conclude (from A ) (that )節 /wh節 〗〈人などが 〉 (推論により )(A 〈事 物など 〉から )…と […かを ]結論づける , 断定する ; ⦅書 ⦆〖直接話法 〗…と結論づける ; 〖it is concluded (that )節 〗結論としては …である (!(1 )進行形にしない. (2 )直接話法の伝達部は文頭のほか, 文中 文尾も可能; →say 他動詞 1 a 語法 ) ▸ The investigators concluded that the tight flight schedule had led to the plane crash .調査員はきつい飛行スケジュールが墜落事故につながったと結論づけた ▸ “Walking is better for seniors than jogging, ” concluded the researchers .「高齢者にはジョギングより歩くことの方が体に良い 」と研究者は結論づけた ▸ What can you conclude from this experiment? この実験からどのような結論が得られますか 2 ⦅かたく ⦆〈(主に長期間行ってきた )事 〉を完成させる , まとめる ▸ conclude one's study of the composer その作曲家の研究をまとめる 3 ⦅かたく ⦆ «…で /…することで » 〈活動 話 会議など 〉を締めくくる , 終える «with /by do ing » ; ⦅書 ⦆〖直接話法 〗(話 文章などを )…と述べて 締めくくる (finish )(↔begin ; →say 他動詞 1a 語法 )▸ conclude a three-game series against the Giants ジャイアンツとの3連戦を終える ▸ conclude one's speech with a famous quotation 有名な引用文 [句 ]で演説を締めくくる 4 ⦅かたく ⦆〈人などが 〉 «…と » 〈条約 合意 契約など 〉を締結する , 取り結ぶ «with » ▸ conclude a peace treaty with the country その国と和平条約を締結する 5 ⦅主に米 ⦆〖~ that節 /to do 〗…だ […する ]と決心する , 決定する (decide ).自動詞 1 a. ⦅かたく ⦆〈活動 話 会議などが 〉 «…で » 終わる , 終了する «with » (↔begin )▸ The course concludes with the analysis of Mars .講義は火星の分析で終わります b. 〈人が 〉 «…することで » 話を締めくくる «by do ing » (!doingには通例sayingなど発話を表す 動詞 が来る ) ▸ to conclude (スピーチや文章の締めくくりの言葉を述べる時に )終わるにあたって 2 結論を出す , 決定する .To be concl ú ded .(連載記事などが )次回完結 .