Skillswise Factsheet
Wt/L1.6

The language of fact and opinion

How do we distinguish between fact and opinion?

One way is to look at the language. Language helps us to decide whether a statement can be backed up with evidence and verified in some way. Or whether the statement is someone's point of view, judgement or belief.

Here are some examples of the language we use to express facts:

HINT: Look at the key words used to express facts: discovered, demonstrated, according, confirm.

Here are some examples of the language we use to express opinion:

HINT: Look at the key words used to express opinion: claims, argues, view, suspect.

WARNING! Facts and opinions can be manipulated. Opinions can be presented as facts, simply by using the language of facts to present them.

"Recent statements made by the council confirm that most residents do not want a further expansion of the one-way system of streets."

Although facts are expressed in the language in the above statement, there is very little evidence to back it up. The council may have made statements about increasing the number of one-way streets, but this does not mean that local residents were surveyed and their responses recorded in any way.


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