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The phrase "unfair conclusion" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when you are referring to a judgment or opinion that you think is not based on fair consideration of the facts or situation. For example, "The judge arrived at an unfair conclusion because of the accuser's personal bias."
Exact(2)
If disclosing the complete picture leads people to an unfair conclusion about me, isn't it right, not to mention advantageous, to withhold some information?
However, this supposition assumes that those individuals who died from measles otherwise had zero risk of death; as severity of measles is influenced by nutritional status, we believe that this assumption is not valid and therefore that this would be an incorrect and unfair conclusion [ 20, 21].
Similar(58)
Ignorance of a school, its neighbourhood or intake, merely leads to wrong or unfair conclusions.
One view held that the Twitterati had succumbed to a mob mentality, jumping to unfair conclusions about Amazon's motives.
There's a history of people jumping to unfair conclusions or even actively cherry-picking cases to amplify doubt in scientific work.
Given the constraints, Judge Owen said, his "duty to carry out a full, fair and fearless investigation into the death of Mr. Litvinenko" would be compromised, leading to "incomplete, misleading or unfair conclusions".
After the Senate committee delivered a draft to the CIA in 2012, the agency then launched its own review of the report, before concluding that the Senate's draft was marred by errors and unfair conclusions.
Breaking his silence two weeks after a report by the company's main regulator plunged the management of the mortgage giant into crisis by accusing senior executives of manipulating accounting and earnings to get bigger bonuses, Mr. Raines said the federal agency had drawn unfair conclusions.
Let's not fall for it, nor should we leap to unfair conclusions about other countries without carefully examining the facts on the ground.
Which is why it's time for people on Facebook, Twitter and elsewhere to stop drawing broad, unfounded, incriminating and terribly unfair conclusions of guilt, or unequivocal statements of innocence, about a very complicated 21-year-old case with which they personally know absolutely nothing about.
It would of course be unfair to draw conclusions on the basis of a trailer, but three words came to me while watching, and these were not words to be welcomed.
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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