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"modest conclusion" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It is typically used when a speaker or writer is attempting to be humble or understated in their final remarks. For example, "I may not have the authority to draw a firm conclusion but, in my modest opinion, I believe we should move forward with this course of action."
Exact(7)
Scribner and Cole's modest conclusion — "Literacy makes some difference to some skills in some contexts" — convinced some people that the literate mind was not so different from the oral one after all.
Andrew Gelman, a statistician at Columbia, argued after their first paper that the excess deaths among middle-aged white people were far less extreme than Case and Deaton suggested, and that, if they had slightly adjusted their age cohorts, they would have had a much more modest conclusion.
But 15 weeks is not enough time to bring many of his students up to speed, and he wonders about remediation generally, citing a study of Ohio community colleges that came to the tellingly modest conclusion that "remediation does not appear to have a negative effect".
Turkey's rehabilitation, which drew to its modest conclusion in a committee room on Capitol Hill last week, is a curious diplomatic tale.Now that he is out of power, most Turks say that Mr Erbakan picked a rotten time to revive the deal to buy gas from Iran.
Salmon's argument, as we have seen, has a similarly modest conclusion.
The fragments of On Law and Justice (Thesleff 1965, 33.1 36.11) were studied in some detail by Delatte (1922), who showed that the treatise deals with the political conceptions of the fourth century and who came to the modest conclusion that the work might be by Archytas, since there were no positive indications of late composition.
Similar(53)
He makes modest conclusions.
Most independent analyses have reached more modest conclusions, and some experts argue that there is little evidence of any meaningful economic impact.
His books consist of a series of plainly stated statistical observations, in support of deceptively modest conclusions, and the evidence in support of his original observation is now so overwhelming that the Flynn effect has moved from theory to fact.
Despite the ambiguity of the front page, we can probably safely make two modest conclusions: first, some Jews in Britain are likely to be disturbed by it (in fact, from my social media feeds, some certainly are) and that is worth at least taking seriously.
Novel illustrations of the remnant strain are made, and some modest conclusions as to the nature of the structure of the experimentally observed bucky-tori are suggested.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com