Overview
Hedging language expresses caution, uncertainty, or approximation. It includes modal verbs (may, might, could), adverbs (possibly, perhaps, generally), verbs (tend to, appear to, seem), and phrases (it could be argued that…). Hedging is essential in academic writing to avoid overgeneralisation.
Hedging Verbs and Modals
- Verbssuggest, indicate, appear, seem, tend to + inf
- Modalsmay, might, could, would — reduce certainty
- ExampleThe data suggests a possible correlation.
- ExampleThis may account for the discrepancy.
Hedging Adverbs and Phrases
- Adverbsarguably, possibly, apparently, seemingly, presumably
- Phrasesit is possible that / it seems likely that / to some extent
- Passiveit could be argued that / it has been suggested that
- Qualifierin most cases / generally / under certain conditions
Over-hedging vs Under-hedging
- Under-hedging: This proves X causes Y → ✅ The data suggests a possible relationship
- Over-hedging: It might possibly seem as though it could arguably be... → far too weak
- Match hedge strength to evidence: stronger data = weaker hedge needed.
When to use
Research papers
The findings suggest a correlation between stress and sleep quality.
Journalism
The minister is believed to have resigned over the scandal.
Academic essays
This analysis may not account for all relevant variables.
Business reports
The data appears to indicate a gradual improvement in performance.