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caveats

Caveats are warnings or provisos that accompany statements, analyses, or actions to indicate limitations, uncertainties, or conditions under which the information is valid. The term originates from the Latin caveat, 'let him beware,' and is used in English in the plural form caveats to refer to multiple such cautions.

In scholarly writing and scientific reporting, caveats signal methodological weaknesses, small sample sizes, measurement error, potential

In legal, regulatory, or policy contexts, caveats appear as qualifiers, disclaimers, or conditions that limit liability

In technology and data, caveats warn about software versions, data quality, or assumptions behind models and

Overall, caveats are a standard tool for transparency and caution; they do not negate findings but frame

confounding
factors,
or
limits
to
generalizability.
They
help
readers
assess
reliability
and
applicability.
or
specify
operational
boundaries.
They
may
pertain
to
compliance,
scope,
timing,
or
exemptions.
forecasts;
they
remind
users
that
results
may
change
with
new
data
or
settings.
them
within
uncertainties
and
conditions.