Nothing.
No you would not include your hypothesis in your conclusion because they are two different and separate procedures in the Scientific Method.
Because a conclusion indicates that it is no longer a theory, but a proven fact. A theory is an unproven hypothesis.
A result is what happend because of something but a conclusion is the total ending as in what happed in the end
The hypothesis is the guess you make before the experiment. The conclusion the summaryof you results, and you can discuss whether your hypothesis was correct or not.
A prediction is what you think will happen BEFORE the experiment is followed through with, a conclusion is what you observe and conclude after the experiment has been completed.
Finally.
To conclude So summarize In conclusion As I said To summarize; Finally, In conclusion; In closing; Re-stating (and then restate the facts you are trying to get accross).
finally lastly
difference between abstract and conclusion
they are being presented to different audiences - apex
finally to wrap up by way of finishing
In summary to summarize finally in closing
Make a point in the introduction, back it up with evidence in the paragraphs, analyse it in the paragraphs, show links between the evidences and, finally, summarise in the conclusion.
in conclusion in summary in closing Finally it is concluded to conclude In retrospect overall To conclude, To sum up, To summarize, Thus, Therefore, In sum, In brief, In short, As you can see, As a result, Finally, In a nutshell,
introduction first, arguing for and against next and finally the conclusion
A brilliant simple starter would be finally....... or therefor would be a little more complicated. But you would have to think whether it would suit what you are trying to say in the rest of the paragraph. The original (trusted) answer: It depends on what you mean by conclusion. If you mean 'conclusion' in the sense of 'end', 'Finally' would be a good word to introduce it. If you mean 'conclusion' in the sense of 'inference', 'Therefore' is a possibility.
"Jumping to a conclusion" is not knowing all the facts and forming a conclusion. Drawing a conclusion is learning all the facts to make a conclusion if it is correct or not.