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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a flat demand" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a demand that is straightforward, unambiguous, or lacking in enthusiasm or variation.
Example: "The manager made a flat demand for the report to be submitted by the end of the day, leaving no room for negotiation."
Alternatives: "an outright demand" or "a straightforward demand".
Exact(4)
As for Mr. bin Laden, some tribal commanders in Tora Bora said that they had added a flat demand that Al Qaeda adherents hand over their leader.
This migration from firms has created a growing delta between increased demand for legal services and a flat demand for law firms.
Assuming a flat demand throughout the year, the automotive customer shows a loss of around 684900 $/hour due to lack of energy in the factory [30].
For example, the role of nuclear power is unlikely to change substantially in countries with a flat demand for electricity, such as Japan, which now relies on nuclear power for 30% of its electric capacity and expects to see a population decline, or France, with a stable population and a power industry that is 80% nuclear.
Similar(56)
A woman and her daughter have been punched and stabbed by two burglars who broke into a flat demanding money.
Banc of America, which rates Solectron at "neutral" with a $13 price target, said, "we believe Solectron should achieve our and the consensus earnings-per-share estimates over the next 12 to 18 months in a flat-demand environment, due to restructuring.
You might think rising gasoline prices at a time of flat demand and surging domestic oil production would convince Americans that we need to find alternatives to oil.
A five-year-and-counting flat demand for law firms in an expanding market for legal services evidences buyers' willingness to shift business to providers that satisfy their expectations.
Utilities are eager to tap the EV market – large-scale vehicle electrification can reverse a decade-long trend of flat demand growth.
The Report provides a broad range of data confirming weaknesses in the traditional model: flat demand for law firm services in a market with growing demand; shrinking leverage (one of the cornerstones of the BigLaw model); reduced realization; intense competition; and the failure of most law firms to innovate in a market demanding it.
In the early years of the 20th century, California's orange growers faced a double-edged problem: ever-increasing production and flat demand.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com