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The phrase "less in demand" is correct and can be used in written English.
It usually refers to something that is not as desired or sought after as it once was. For example, "With modern technology improving so quickly, VHS players are becoming less in demand."
Exact(30)
In the 1970s, when traditional leading ladies were less in demand, Withers's career became more variable.
While ballet companies often hire individual stars, guest couples are less in demand.
With time, taste being fickle, he came to be less in demand.
The big sellers of three years ago may be less in demand today.
With the exception of perceived merger targets, smaller shares were less in demand than their bigger brethren.
Proving, perhaps, that light, soft-centred entertainment was less in demand in the special-effects dominated movies of the 1990s.
Similar(29)
The women make their own tortillas out of fresh masa, although these are reserved for less-in-demand items like quesadillas and picaditas.
Not Galbraith, though he is less in public demand nowadays.
Women tend to be either less aggressive in demanding pain treatment or to be aggressive in ways that are misinterpreted as hysteria.
"Women tend to be less aggressive in demanding pain treatment or aggressive in ways that are dismissed as mere hysteria," she writes.
They also found that people with less control in demanding jobs were 15.4% more likely to die than those with more liberty to structure their own timelines and goals.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com