$\DeclareMathOperator\Gr{Gr}$Let $G$ be the absolute Galois group of a finite extension of $\mathbb{Q}_p$ with inertia subgroup $I$, and let $V$ be an $\ell$-adic representation of $G$. Grothendieck's Monodromy Theorem says that after passing to an open subgroup of $G$, the action of $I$ is unipotent, and moreover may be described by a nilpotent operator $N \colon V \to V$.
There is a monodromy filtration $M_i V$, such that $N M_i V \subseteq M_{i-2}$ and $N^i \colon \Gr^M_i V \to \Gr^M_{-i} V$ is an isomorphism. The Weight-Monodromy Conjecture states that if $V=H^n(X_{\overline{k}};\mathbb{Q}_{\ell})$ for a variety $X$ over a number field $k$, then the Frobenius action on $\Gr^M_i V$ is pure of weight $n+i$ (in particular, the case of good reduction is essentially the Weil conjecture).
Is there a version of this conjecture stating that $\Gr^M_i V = 0$ for $|i| > n$? I can't seem to find that in the literature (e.g., in Conjecture 1.13 of Scholze, or in Deligne's original article).
This is true for abelian varieties, and it seems implied in the literature, but I haven't found a statement like this.
The statement should more generally say that whenever $V$ is an effective motive of weight $n$, the weights are in the interval $[0,2n]$.