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Discover LudwigThe phrase "loss of flexibility" is correct and can be used in written English.
It is often used to describe a situation where someone or something has become less adaptable or able to change. Example: The new rules and regulations have resulted in a loss of flexibility for small businesses, making it difficult for them to adjust to changing market conditions.
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Pain, stiffness and loss of flexibility in my right leg increased with each passing month.
"The government's flexibility has been greatly reduced".Any loss of flexibility may come back to haunt the government.
The cynic in me believes that the loss of flexibility for advertisers across devices will encourage more aggressive auction spaces and higher click costs across devices.
Mr. Gillinson acknowledged on Tuesday that with the many outsize ventures Carnegie has undertaken in recent years has come a certain loss of flexibility.
"If you have a loss of flexibility in the hips, the back will take up the slack and absorb more of the pressures of the swing than it should," Vad says.
Its main advantage for the government is that it can guarantee control of parliament, but the price paid is a loss of flexibility, and the potential embarrassment of having to negotiate away manifesto pledges to secure the deal.
But Faber-Castell is well enough capitalised, with a debt-to-equity ratio of roughly 50%, and the count says he would regret the loss of flexibility and the time demanded for investment roadshows.
But the main effect of Labour's policy would be to stop landlords imposing hefty rent rises mid-tenancy; the market would still determine starting rents, which might go up to compensate landlords for the loss of flexibility.
Howard Dean of Vermont, a Democrat, told the Senate Finance Committee today that he feared that the administration's proposals would mean "a loss of flexibility" for the states and "a top-down approach" that would force states like Vermont to abandon successful training and job-placement programs.
But the pluses must be set against a loss of flexibility and freedom to allocate resources in an organisation that can never know for sure what war it will next be called upon to fight.Moreover, defence PFI deals have also proved poor at transferring risk from the government to suppliers.
But the NAO has also drawn attention to the "particular risks from being locked into a long-term contract as part of a PFI deal"—the potential loss of flexibility in responding to changing health-care needs, for example, from local population changes.
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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