Example sentences of "but in [adj] years [pers pn] have " in BNC.

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1 All farms have rats and mice but in recent years they have been coming through from the barn into the house and getting into the furniture .
2 But in recent years he has spent £50,000 of his own money and much time on charitable causes .
3 Glass-fibre remains an inexpensive and effective reinforcement material , but in recent years it has been upstaged by Kevlar and carbon fibre , two stronger but more costly materials that owe their high profile largely to their use in formula racing cars .
4 The company at one time had a significant tie to the defence industry , but in recent years it has focused on what it knows best — speciality chemicals .
5 But in recent years it has lost its fury .
6 It was traditionally associated with Persia and the southern Caucasus , but in recent years it has been incorporated into the repertoire of weaving groups in other rug-making countries .
7 Much of the Forestry Commission 's early planting was certainly crude and insensitive , but in recent years it has become more attentive to its landscaping responsibilities ( not least because the Forestry Commission has found that there is money to be made out of tourism if it does so ) and now employs landscape consultants to advise on its planting policies .
8 Often they still are , but in recent years it has become common for other senior academics to act as heads of departments , sometimes in rotation .
9 Like many a similar building it had declined in status but in recent years it has been handsomely restored to its former glory .
10 Of the domestic borrowers , local authorities issued , in the years between the mid-1950s and the early 1980s , a large volume of stocks ( over five years to maturity ) and negotiable bonds ( from one to four years to maturity ) ; but in recent years it has been government policy to centralise most public-sector borrowing and as a result public issues by local authorities have all but ceased .
11 There had been a period when he allowed Barbara Castle , Dick Crossman and George Wigg , all of whom suffered from the belief that politics was a conspiracy , to influence him too much , but in later years he had broken free from them and I suddenly realised how much I had got used to him being there to shoulder the final responsibility , to feeling able to turn to him naturally for a second opinion and for well-informed advice .
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