Faded in a sentence as an adjective

As the article points out, the Silk Road faded in importance in the 1400s.

Seems more like path is getting desperate as its early hype has long since faded.

If you're presenting an EMT with a ten-year-old, faded tattoo, you're placing them in an awkward position due to the lack of context.

Gradually, as he had toiled without progress, his reputation had faded and he had become increasingly reclusive.

My interest in Mythbusters faded as their excuses for blowing stuff up every week became increasingly absurd and pointless.

But you'll adjust by the end and not really "notice" it per se; it has faded to the background and you are once again only experiencing the semantic content of the movie.

Because the people who made it originally are gone, replaced by a bunch of guys who are told "Make it work like the last one, but the market says it needs to be more action-y, so do that too." The people on the new team weren't there the first time around, and so they wind up making a faded copy of a game trying to imitate the predecessor.

It's also not a narrowly-written opinion:> Even less sophisticated phones like Wurie’s, which have already faded in popularity since Wurie was arrested in 2007, have been around for less than 15 years.

Faded definitions

adjective

having lost freshness or brilliance of color; "sun-bleached deck chairs"; "faded jeans"; "a very pale washed-out blue"; "washy colors"

See also: bleached washed-out washy

adjective

reduced in strength; "the faded tones of an old recording"

See also: attenuate attenuated weakened