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    Use "conclusions" in a sentence

    conclusions example sentences

    conclusions


    1. You’re jumping to conclusions, Liz …


    2. ‘I think someone jumped to some erroneous conclusions as to why I was here


    3. Saul towered heads and shoulders over everyone else; why did David intimidate him? When we study out the contradictions in Saul and David’s characters, we come to conclusions that the very thing that brings the Sauls to a boil is the foolishness that the authentic is unselfconsciously in God


    4. The unnamed founder answered that, "Let's see some more of the images before we leap to any conclusions


    5. Reassured by his aides and aware that the world’s press was waiting with baited breath, the great politician himself now wanted to read the document, even though there were still some relevant facts to include and a few final conclusions to draw


    6. The two charlatans attended the cabinet and ran through the contents of the report with the assembled ministers of state, describing and explaining all of their arguments, summaries and conclusions in the clearest and simplest terms


    7. He had to be careful he didn't fight against the crew coming to some of the same conclusions, but he would look upon whatever this dark matter contained as more of a new enemy than an act of God


    8. Rather than assuming it is related to you and leaping to negative conclusions about your promotion, you could say to yourself, “He"s probably just stressed about a deadline or other problem


    9. As expected, Anna is walking this way, I pre-empt her, ‘Before you go jumping to conclusions, Anna, he slept on the sofa!’


    10. include and a few final conclusions to draw

    11. explaining all of their arguments, summaries and conclusions in the


    12. Not sure if he's jumping to conclusions or not


    13. Also, you have several logic errors in your conclusions


    14. “We do this sometimes to play with people when we see that they have jumped to conclusions


    15. Belle not only encouraged this behavior but had them make reports, synopses and essays over the information, concepts and conclusions drawn from their readings


    16. Claire comes back into the office after lunch and, seeing the smile on my face, draws her own conclusions


    17. I don’t want to jump to conclusions but rather hope he will be staying with me


    18. “That could be, but we'll draw the conclusions when we have a lot more data


    19. forming his own conclusions


    20. conclusions and implicate anyone unfairly

    21. for jumping to conclusions


    22. “Willow, I love you, but I think you are jumping to conclusions


    23. And the conclusions they make by themselves are rarely challenged


    24. This is because they take on their conclusions they’ve made as their own


    25. interpreted rightly and in context, conflicts with the conclusions of


    26. Walvoord expressly disagrees with the conclusions of this book


    27. Carius closed his eyes and sighed deeply, honestly trying to understand how his dearest friend had arrived at such disturbing conclusions


    28. Reincarnation is a real process but due to a suppression of past-life memory upon entering this physical world, we are left to draw our own conclusions about life, which in most cases deviate from the truths


    29. 3 of your minutes I transmit reports and conclusions to the other overseers


    30. They consider any conclusions drawn from the information contained in the Bible, can only be classified as pseudo-science

    31. These questions have a considerable impact on the conclusions that are drawn


    32. In the red-shift example, if we had freedom of movement in the Universe, it would have contributed immensely to the resolution of our measurements and assisted us in obtaining more certainty from the conclusions that scientists are drawing


    33. In our quest to evaluate the Bible as we know it today, according to the scientific method to see what conclusions we can draw, we will firstly start with the New Testament and see what it offers in respect of design


    34. From this we will then begin to draw some conclusions on deciding whether the Bible can be considered a candidate for supernatural design


    35. All three apparently reached the same conclusions at the same time in different parts of the world


    36. If we consider the complexity, not just of the message that was hidden in this wrapped ELS, but also of the design properties, we see the following aspects emerging from this code and can therefore draw the following logical conclusions:


    37. If we keep all these aspects in mind, what conclusions should we then draw from these provable facts? We are dealing here with a Book that is unlike any other book on earth


    38. We have limited technology available to probe it and conclusions that are drawn are obtained from sketchy information at best


    39. This was an opportunity for the American consul and affiliates to have a thorough inspection of the vessel and to draw conclusions about its reason for being in Australia, and its intentions after leaving


    40. She does not spare the whip, nor the lash, in her investigations and conclusions into what is transparently wrong with the life of the mind in modern Western Civilization

    41. Josh was jumping to conclusions again


    42. The President has issued his regrets about the loss of a great athlete but has urged the public not to jump to any conclusions until more of the facts are in


    43. I am sure that you have been able to form your own conclusions, and you are probably correct


    44. Provided ample opportunities to self-destruct, that child soon acquires disagreeable habits that, reinforced by common attitudes, establishes the rocky foundations of a society populated by lingering, single-minded adolescents who, guided by their own (―exceptional‖) rules of conduct, acquire self-centered and perhaps anti-social points of view devolving into a collection of interchangeable parts reflecting the questionable character of that society‘s lowest forms that must negatively impact its social, cultural and political institutions including schools, churches, political organizations, judicial system, the news media, corporations, all! A free and open society should never impose arbitrary limits or draw uncertain conclusions as to how an individual should (otherwise) think or act however eccentric or unconventional such attitudes may appear; although that society, by example, should seek to broaden exemplary manners and customs essential to the maintenance of proper form if that society hopes to function effectively


    45. Such (thoughtless) attitudes are (especially) apparent among certain segments of our Youth who have grown indifferent, if not impervious, altogether, to nuance, irony and wit or subtle designs or delicate shadings that (otherwise) require a receptive imagination rather than taking ―everything‖ at their face value, (as many of them seem to do); conditioned as their minds often are by the requirements of material ―evidence‖ and visual ―proofs‖; neither able to draw inferences nor reach (meaningful) conclusions from underlying sources, opting, instead, for the path of least (perceptual) resistance


    46. Once the Supreme Court succumbs to external (political) pressures or its own unqualified assumptions of Justice, without regard to legality, that legal body can no longer be properly considered an objective interpreter of our nation‘s laws; its critically-minded reviews and summary conclusions centering on the (penumbral) legality of questionable (historical) assumptions…


    47. This job was not helping my career at all and, would this environment be conducive to my Christian life? I pondered along this line of thought for most the day yet drew no conclusions


    48. There has been a disturbing tendency in recent years to categorically broaden (read: create more poor people) descriptive statistics designed to either support or reject existing assumptions relating to poverty rates that are oftentimes overstated, unreliable, unsupported by fact and likely to provide biased conclusions about poverty, its definition, extent, causes and prognosis for the future


    49. Moral Relativism lacks a supporting structure; that is to say, lacks a universal standard by which to (correctly) assess the proposed merits of some moral or ethical proposition whereas Moral Absolutism, drawn to its own (unconditional) point(s) of reference or final conclusions, oftentimes assumes too heavy a burden that must otherwise be lessened by degrees or fall under its own weight


    50. Reason allows an individual to consider things rationally and to draw abstract conclusions about ―things














































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