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Discover LudwigThe phrase "always flat" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe something that consistently lacks variation, excitement, or change, such as a performance, a sound, or a situation.
Example: "The music was enjoyable, but the singer's voice was always flat, lacking the emotional highs and lows that could have made it more captivating."
Alternatives: "consistently dull" or "perpetually monotone".
Exact(17)
Florence is always flat.
The characters - always flat and unfeatured, to begin with - come next.
The metal/scale interface was always flat, while the morphology of the scale/gas interface changed greatly with temperature.
But a cave is not at nice right angles and it's not always flat like your house.
"I don't mind the cellist, because she's always flat, and I know that if I took up the cello again I'd be better than her.
To better pound the New York pavement, brightly colored socks and shoes -- always flat, nothing too pointy -- are worn with jean hems dangling or, if tourniquet- tight, tucked in or cuffed.
Similar(43)
We look at cinema screens, TV screens, phone screens, and it's always a flat, rectangular projection or a flat rectangular image.
She plays always strong, flat.
The journals always want flat pictures.
The sea is always full, flat as a floor.
"I thought that within storage there is a fetishism about space, and dresses are always stored flat," Ms. Clark said.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com