Home

concludeer

Concludeer is a Dutch verb form derived from conclude-ren, meaning to draw a conclusion or to deduce something from information. It appears in two main uses:

- Present tense first-person singular: ik concludeer (I conclude). This is the standard conjugation of the verb

- Imperative mood (singular): Concludeer! (Conclude!). The imperative form is used to give a direct instruction to

Other present-tense forms include: jij concludeert, hij concludeert; wij concludeeren, jullie concludeeren, zij concludeeren.

Examples: Uit dit bewijs concludeer ik dat de theorie klopt. Concludeer alstublieft wat dit betekent.

Etymology and related forms: Concludeer comes from the verb conclude-ren (to conclude), which in turn derives

Usage notes: In formal or academic Dutch, concludeer is commonly used in the sense of drawing a

See also: conclusie, concluderend, concluderen.

in
the
present
tense.
someone
to
draw
a
conclusion.
from
Late
Latin
concludere,
from
con-
“together”
+
cludere
“to
close.”
The
Dutch
verb
is
closely
related
to
the
noun
conclusie
(conclusion)
and
the
adjectival
form
concluderend
(concluding).
logical
deduction
or
final
statement
from
data.
It
is
often
followed
by
a
clause
indicating
the
basis
for
the
conclusion,
or
by
a
direct
statement
of
the
conclusion
itself.
The
spelling
and
pronunciation
are
consistent
with
standard
Dutch
orthography.