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There are two and one syllables in "recent" and "where," respectively.
No person or agency keeps track of the number of coins in circulation. In recent decades on average several billion have been minted annually so it would be utterly impossible to track them.
The nth root of a number is that number which when raised to the nth power (ie when multiplied by itself n times) results in the number. When n=2, it is the square root of the number; when n=3 it is the cube root of the number. To find the nth root of a number, an electronic calculator can be used, using the nth root button [x√y] (though more recent calculators replace the x and y by boxes) viz: <n> [x√y] [2] [4] [4] [=] or with the more recent calculators: [#√#] <n> [Navigate →] [2] [4] [4] [=] where <n> is the nth root, eg for 2nd root (square roots) enter [2]; and the # is being used to represent a box on the keys of the more recent calculator. Considering the rules for indices, the nth root is the the number to the power of 1/n, ie 244^(1/n), thus the calculation can be done using the power button: [2] [4] [4] [^] [(] [1] [÷] <n> [)] [=] With the more recent calculators, the power button is pressed first, the 244 entered, the navigate-right key pressed (to get in to the power part of the input) and then the n entered.
In recent past
Yes, the word 'recently' is an adverb because it alters the meaning of a verb. An example would be 'he recently had the flu and was unable to go to school' where had/have is the verb.