"conclude" in a Sentence — Examples for K-8

Three example sentences for conclude, written at K-2, 3-5, and 6-8 reading levels.

What does "conclude" mean?

conclude is a verb that means: to end something or decide what it all means. Seeing it in real sentences helps kids learn how the word actually behaves in writing.

Grade K–2Easy sentence with conclude

"Conclude the story."

Notice the short, simple structure — perfect for early readers learning to decode and understand new words.

Grade 3–5Upper-elementary sentence with conclude

"We can conclude that the plant in the dark closet grew the least."

This sentence adds more context and detail — typical of chapter books at this grade level.

Grade 6–8Middle-school sentence with conclude

"From the data alone you can conclude almost anything if you're willing to ignore the parts that don't agree with your theory."

At this level, conclude takes on subtler shades of meaning depending on context — the kind of nuance middle-schoolers need for essay writing.

How to use these sentences in the classroom

Sentence imitation — Read the example aloud, then have students write their own sentence with the same structure but a different topic.

Vocabulary notebooks — Have students copy the grade-appropriate sentence into their vocabulary journal alongside the definition.

Reading comprehension — Ask students to identify why conclude is the right word for that sentence — what would change if you swapped it for a synonym?

FAQ — using "conclude" in sentences

How do I use conclude in a sentence for a 1st grader?
Try: "Conclude the story." Keep it under 7 words and use sight-word vocabulary around it.
What's a more advanced sentence with conclude?
"From the data alone you can conclude almost anything if you're willing to ignore the parts that don't agree with your theory."

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