conclusive

intermediateB2

/kənˈkluːsɪv/ · con-clu-sive

Serving to prove a case; decisive or convincing.

Meanings

adjectiveformal

Serving to prove a case; decisive or convincing.

کسی معاملے کو ثابت کرنے کے لیے کام آنا؛ فیصلہ کن یا قائل کرنے والا۔

حتمی

hatmi

Synonyms

decisivefinalconvincingفیصلہ کنعزمقائل کنندہ

Antonyms

inconclusiveindeterminateambiguousغیر حتمیمبہممشکوک

Common Collocations

  • conclusive evidence
  • conclusive proof
  • conclusive decision

Example Sentences

The results of the experiment provided conclusive evidence of the hypothesis.

تجربے کے نتائج نے مفروضے کے حتمی ثبوت فراہم کیے۔

Tajurbe ke nataij ne mafroozay ke hatmi saboot faraham kiye.

Her testimony was conclusive in winning the case.

اس کی گواہی اس مقدمے کو جیتنے میں فیصلہ کن ثابت ہوئی۔

Us ki gawahi is muqadmay ko jeetne mein faisla kun saabit hui.

The study offered conclusive insights into the effectiveness of the treatment.

مطالعے نے علاج کی مؤثریت کے بارے میں حتمی بصیرت فراہم کی۔

Mutaleye ne ilaaj ki mawfiyat ke bare mein hatmi baseerat faraham ki.

Easily Confused With

conclusive:Conclusive refers specifically to evidence that decisively proves something, while inclusive refers to something that includes various elements or groups.

Word Family

conclude
verbختم کرنا
conclusion
nounنتیجہ

See Also

💡 Memory Tip

Think of 'conclusive' as 'conclusively proving' something.

Imagine a judge giving a final verdict in a courtroom.

✍️ Urdu Poetry

ہزاروں خواہشیں ایسی کہ ہر خواہش پہ دم نکلے، بہت نکلے میرے ارمان مگر پھر بھی کم نکلے۔

Hazaaron khwahishen aisi ke har khwahish pe dam nikle, Bohat nikle mere armaan magar phir bhi kam nikle.

Thousands of desires, each so intense it could take my breath away; many of my wishes came true, yet still felt few.

Mirza Ghalib, Divan-e-Ghalib

* Poetry attribution is AI-generated and may require verification.

🗣️ Urdu Proverb

آخری فیصلہ ہمیشہ بہتر ہوتا ہے۔

Aakhri faisla hamesha behtar hota hai.

The final decision is always the best.

📖 Etymology

Origin: Latin "conclusivus" — having a concluding quality

First known use: 14th century

The term evolved from Latin roots into Middle English, integrating into modern usage to imply finality or decisiveness.