Concluding in a sentence as an adjective

And those people are rapidly concluding that this thing is an odious turd of the very first order.

It seems like a clear-cut case, and concluding "don't build anything for Twitter" is just throwing a temper tantrum.

There's relatively little subtlety, and a concluding paragraph that dubiously hates on the 8-hour work day.

So basically he's concluding, having written some Haskell that he's not confident enough to maintain/improve a large project in the language?Seems fair enough to me really?

So, by quoting a 2-year old book on Facebook and displaying one stock graph, the author of this post arrives at the following concluding graf:Sandberg should start an ad agency on the East Coast.

Your words here reflect some basic misunderstandings of the science involved, but rather than concluding "I don't understand this", you've instead suggested what amounts to a conspiracy theory.

For example, recently on Gizmodo, you will find pro-Apple articles suggesting comparisons between every single device on this planet concluding Apple is superior in all aspects, but, never any of its disadvantages.

I begin here by evaluating this standard in the context of three published replication attempts, involving investigations of the embodiment of morality, the endowment effect, and weather effects on life satisfaction, concluding the standard has unacceptable problems.

Having watched three TSA officers debate for five minutes over whether or not peanut butter was a liquid and concluding that "well, peanut butter goes on peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, and we don't allow petroleum jelly through, so we don't allow peanut butter through either", I really am skeptical of this claim...

Concluding definitions

adjective

occurring at or forming an end or termination; "his concluding words came as a surprise"; "the final chapter"; "the last days of the dinosaurs"; "terminal leave"

See also: final last terminal