Adjective
edit
in demand (comparative more in demand, superlative most in demand)
- sought-after; popular; coveted
2011 January 25, Phil McNulty, “Blackpool 2 - 3 Man Utd”, in BBC[1]:At the heart of that dramatic opening period was in-demand midfield man Charlie Adam, who continues to be pursued by Liverpool and has informed Blackpool of his desire to leave.
2023 March 8, Neil Robertson, “Tackling the skills shortage”, in RAIL, number 978, page 33:Importantly, apprenticeships provide an alternate route into employment, giving people from all backgrounds the chance to build in-demand skills and a career for life.
Translations
edit
sought-after
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 搶手/抢手 (zh) (qiǎngshǒu), 有需要的 (yǒu xūyào de)
- Danish: efterspurgt, ombejlet
- Finnish: kysytty (fi), kurantti (fi)
- French: être très demandé (fr), recherché (fr) m
- German: gesucht (de), begehrt (de), hoch im Kurs
- Italian: conteso (it), pregiato (it) m, gettonato (it) m, ricercato (it) m, richiesto (it) m, ambito (it) m
- Japanese: 需要がある (ja) (じゅようがある, juyō ga aru), 人気がある (ja) (にんきがある, ninki ga aru)
- Korean: 수요가 있다 (ko) (suyo-ga itda), 인기가 있다 (ko) (in'gi-ga itda)
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: ettertraktet
- Portuguese: em demanda
- Russian: по́льзующийся спро́сом (pólʹzujuščijsja sprósom), жела́нный (ru) (želánnyj), тре́буемый (ru) (trébujemyj), популя́рный (ru) (populjárnyj), востре́бованный (ru) (vostrébovannyj)
- Spanish: cotizado (es) m, codiciado (es) m, solicitado (es) m
- Swedish: eftersökt (sv), efterfrågad (sv), eftertraktad (sv)
- Ukrainian: популярний (populjarnyj), той, що користується попитом (toj, ščo korystujetʹsja popytom)
- Vietnamese: bán chạy, đắt hàng (vi)
|
Anagrams
edit