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concludi

Concludi is a form of the Italian verb concludere. It functions as the second person singular form in the present indicative tense and also as the second person singular imperative. In both uses, the spelling is concludi.

Origin and meaning: concludere comes from Latin concludere, from con- “together” and cludere “to shut.” The Italian

Usage notes: In the present indicative, it corresponds to “you conclude” (Tu concludi). In the imperative, it

Conjugation and forms: The full present indicative for concludere is io concludo, tu concludi, lui/lei conclude,

See also: concludere, conclusione, conclusivo.

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verb
conveys
finishing
a
task,
bringing
an
event
to
an
end,
or
drawing
a
conclusion.
Related
words
include
conclusione
(conclusion)
and
conclusivo/conclusiva
(conclusive).
serves
as
a
direct
command
or
request,
as
in
Concludi
subito!
The
verb
is
common
in
formal
and
informal
contexts
when
referring
to
completing
a
process,
finalizing
an
agreement,
or
reaching
a
decision
after
discussion.
noi
concludiamo,
voi
concludete,
essi
concludono.
The
past
participle
is
concluso,
and
the
gerund
is
concludendo.
The
form
concludi
can
therefore
appear
in
different
grammatical
moods
depending
on
context,
but
always
shares
the
same
spelling.