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Reading Comprehension Foundations · Evidence and Inference

Safe inferences

Infer only what the passage clearly implies — never more.

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Safe inferences

An inference is a conclusion that follows logically from what the passage actually says. The trick is to stay close to the text.

Two failure modes

  1. Under-inference — refusing to draw any conclusion the passage implies.
  2. Over-inference — projecting your assumptions beyond what the text supports.

Example

Passage: "Most of the audience left before the second half of the play."

Safe inference: "The audience’s reaction to the first half was mixed at best." ✅ Unsafe inference: "The play was the worst in the city’s history." ❌ (Too strong.)

Tip

Prefer hedged language — "likely", "suggests", "probably" — over absolutes like "always" or "never".

Practice

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Which is the safest inference from "Sales doubled after the redesign"?