Mitigation

Definition:

Mitigation is the pragmatic process of softening or reducing the force of a speech act — making an assertion, request, criticism, refusal, or directive less direct, less imposing, or less face-threatening. Speakers mitigate utterances to preserve social relationships, acknowledge the listener’s autonomy, signal politeness, or express appropriate epistemic humility. Mitigation strategies include hedging (I think, possibly), grounders (giving reasons), preparatory expressions (If you have time, When you get a chance), and alternative frames (I was wondering if…). Mitigation is the counterpart of aggravation (intensification), which increases the force of a speech act.


Mitigation Devices

Lexical mitigation:

  • Modal verbs: could, might, would — reduce certainty and directness
  • Downtoners: a little, slightly, somewhat, just
  • Shields: I think, I believe, I suspect, it seems

Syntactic mitigation:

  • Interrogatives for directives: Could you…? Would you mind…?
  • Conditionals: If it’s possible, would you…?
  • Embedded imperatives: I was wondering if you might be able to…

Discourse-level mitigation:

  • Grounders: Providing reasons that explain or justify the request (I’m late for a meeting — could you help quickly?)
  • Preparators: Seeking advance permission or checking availability before the main request
  • Disarmers: Anticipating and preemptively dismissing objections (I know you’re busy, but…)

Mitigation vs. Hedging

  • Mitigation is the broader pragmatic category of face-softening
  • Hedging is a specific type of mitigation focused on epistemic softening (uncertainty, tentativeness of belief)
  • Hedging is a subtype of mitigation; not all mitigation is hedging

Mitigation in Context

Mitigation is context-sensitive:

  • In intimate relationships (friends, family), direct requests require less mitigation
  • In formal/hierarchical contexts (employee ? supervisor), more mitigation is expected
  • Cultural norms govern default levels: some cultures expect more mitigation in professional contexts; others favor directness as a sign of respect

Mitigation of criticism:

Negative feedback and criticism are frequently mitigated to preserve the relationship:

  • This is wrong ? I think this section might be worth revisiting (heavily mitigated)
  • Unmitigated criticism is typically reserved for close relationships or high urgency

L2 Mitigation

L2 learners frequently under-mitigate — producing more direct utterances than native speakers in equivalent situations:

  • Limited L2 pragmatic repertoire means learners default to simpler, more direct structures
  • L1 transfer: learners from more direct pragmatic cultures may under-mitigate in L2 English contexts
  • Research shows explicit mitigation instruction improves L2 learner production

History

Mitigation as a theoretical construct appears in Fraser (1980) and was developed in the context of face theory (Brown & Levinson, 1987) and politeness frameworks. It has been central to interlanguage pragmatics research since the 1990s.

Common Misconceptions

  • “Mitigation = being indirect” — Mitigation is broader; mitigated speech can still be relatively direct grammatically
  • “Strong mitigation is always the right choice” — Over-mitigation can obscure communicative intent, appear evasive, or feel inauthentic; calibration to context is the goal

Criticisms

  • The mental state/intentionality behind mitigation is difficult to operationalize; corpus measures of mitigation forms may not perfectly reflect pragmatic intent
  • Some approaches conflate mitigation with face-work in ways that reduce analytical precision

Social Media Sentiment

Mitigation is relevant to many popular discussions of “how to give feedback nicely” and “office English” — the pragmatics of softened professional communication is a popular topic in language learning and professional development content. Last updated: 2026-04

Practical Application

  • Teach a repertoire of mitigation devices appropriate to different social contexts and speech acts in the target language
  • Role-play scenarios requiring feedback, refusals, and requests in high-stakes professional settings to practice calibrated mitigation

Related Terms

See Also

Research

  • Fraser, B. (1980). Conversational mitigation. Journal of Pragmatics, 4(4), 341–350. — Foundational analysis of mitigation as a pragmatic concept.
  • Brown, P., & Levinson, S. (1987). Politeness: Some Universals in Language Usage. Cambridge University Press. — Face-based framework underpinning why mitigation is used.
  • Blum-Kulka, S., House, J., & Kasper, G. (1989). Cross-Cultural Pragmatics. Ablex. — Cross-cultural data on mitigation in requests.