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The phrase "articulated recently" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to something that has been expressed or communicated clearly in a recent context.
Example: "The concerns about climate change were articulated recently during the conference, highlighting the urgency of the issue."
Alternatives: "expressed recently" or "communicated recently".
Exact(5)
The Bush strategy, as articulated recently by Robert Zoellick, the deputy secretary of state and point man on China, is not to demonise Beijing but to prod it to become a "responsible stakeholder" in the world economy.The Bush team has not quite lived up to that standard themselves.
Hollywood wage gaps make no sense, which Jennifer Lawrence perfectly articulated recently in an essay.
The "Yes Means Yes" movement, articulated recently by a new statute in California and advanced by first wave feminists like Gloria Steinem, is a giant step in the right direction.
Our view is consistent with the social justice foundations for public health and public health policy articulated recently by Powers and Faden [ 18], which is particularly relevant for observational research in global health.
From a more general perspective, as articulated recently [ 24], the manner in which data were interpreted from a previous American dose/outcome study performed in the late 1970s should serve as an argument against a rush to judgment.
Similar(55)
Paul believed that private entities did have the right to discriminate, a view he had articulated as recently as 2002.
This view was articulated most recently by the Times' new CEO, Mark Thompson, in a profile by Joe Hagan in New York Magazine.
There is a streak of political mischief in the Green belief -- articulated most recently by Ray Tricona, the Minnesota Green running against Mr. Wellstone -- that the sooner things get worse they'll get better.
She writes: Ongoing differences in views articulated most recently by the IMF over how to handle "the Greek problem" may well have played a role in these latest differences.
This idea of rarity is often accompanied by another that is patently false: "women don't need abortions to save their lives," so expertly articulated by recently defeated Republican Joe Walsh.
This view was articulated most recently by Los Angeles Police Chief William Bratton and throughout the year by many other chiefs including Jeff Hadley of Kalamazoo, MI; the Washington State Sheriffs Associationn; J. Thomas Manger of Montgomery County, MD; Hubert Williams, President of the Police Foundation and chief of Newark, NJ; and many others.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com