Seven Deadly Sins Part 2
This series was written by Writing Tip Wednesday reader Rick Hull. Rick has been a health communications specialist with the National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion’s (NCCDPHP’s) Office of the Director for 36 years, many of them as a writer-editor. He is NCCDPHP’s clearance coordinator and branding ambassador, CDC’s logo-licensing and co-branding coordinator, and a reviewer in CDC’s system logos clearance.
His favorite quote is “Great ideas are hogwash. Style and structure are the essence of great writing.” —Vladimir Nabokov, Lectures on Literature
Hedging, which we often see in abstracts and discussion sections, is appropriate when you can’t draw a solid conclusion from a particular finding. Candor, caution, and even modesty are virtues when you’re discussing implications. But you can overdo it.
Example:
It appears that this finding might possibly suggest a new mode of analysis.
Revision:
This finding could suggest a new mode of analysis.
Example:
Our analyses seem to show an apparent link between head injuries and age of diagnosis.
Revision:
Our analyses seem to show a link between head injuries and age of diagnosis.
OR
Our analyses show an apparent link between head injuries and age of diagnosis.