Example sentences of "recently to [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Most recently to date have been experiments on ammonia gas resonantly pumped by CO2 lasers , in which good modulation , and chaos , have been observed in a system which comes close to Ikeda 's original proposal { 18 , 19 } .
2 The Council has worked hard to secure agreement on the proposals and it must be stressed that the improved package offer presented recently to NALGO represents the best balance between the interests of staff involved and Council Tax payers .
3 WE SAID farewell recently to May Lennon , who retired as a supervisor in the purchase ledger department after 13 years with the company .
4 Education Minister Jeremy Hanley paid a visit recently to Bangor Girls ' High School to see first hand this technology in action .
5 Her Honour Judge Marian Norrie-Walker , formerly Marian Jackson , who graduated with an LLB in 1961 , talked recently to MOYRA SUTCLIFFE about her unusual career path and how much she had enjoyed the time she spent at Nottingham .
6 This simplification of what design is has also extended until very recently to pictures of the design activity itself .
7 After an agreement between the two sides , signed yesterday , Costain has dropped its appeal against an injunction granted recently to Hanson 's Peabody coal-mining subsidiary which prevented the assets being sold to another bidder .
8 It is with some sadness we said Goodbye recently to Tom Bryce who left us under SVS .
9 Will the Secretary of State specifically consider protecting the new body 's budget against the extraordinary awards made recently to landowners for not planting trees on sites of special scientific interest ?
10 Now the many attempts to teach the rudiments of a human language to primates , or more recently to porpoises and dolphins , are fascinating and probably equally useful in extending the boundaries of our knowledge of their recognitional limits .
11 There is no discussion of the label ‘ mental handicap ’ , indeed the authors occasionally resort to using the demeaning shorthand ‘ m. h. people ’ , and nowhere is there any reference to self advocacy , to assertiveness , to shared record keeping and assessment , all of which have been areas of considerable interest recently to people with learning disability and those who work with them ( for example , Williams and Scheutz , 1982 ; Brechin and Swain , 1987 ) .
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