Definitions
Settling a question or proving something decisively.
Word origin
From French conclusif, from Late Latin conclusivus, from Latin conclūsīvē (“conclusively”), from past participle of concludere.
Used in a sentence
“The set of premises of a valid argument is conclusive in the sense that no further evidence could possibly be added to the set of premises which would make the argument invalid.”
“conclusive evidence”
Source: Wiktionary, CC BY-SA 4.0
Used as a crossword answer1 curated clues
01“Deciding the issue”10 letters
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