In the vernacular, when “testing a hypothesis” we refer to the hypothesis of interest as the one being tested, i.e. the alternative to the null—not the null itself. (For instance, we say things like “test the effect of gender”, not the more cumbersome “test the null hypothesis of the absence of an effect of gender”.)
In any case it wouldn’t hurt the OP, and could only make it clearer, to reword it to remove the ambiguity.
In the vernacular, when “testing a hypothesis” we refer to the hypothesis of interest as the one being tested, i.e. the alternative to the null—not the null itself. (For instance, we say things like “test the effect of gender”, not the more cumbersome “test the null hypothesis of the absence of an effect of gender”.)
In any case it wouldn’t hurt the OP, and could only make it clearer, to reword it to remove the ambiguity.