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Google Search Tips IV
Sunday, February 25, 2007
Searching the synonyms

If you want to search a term along with its synonyms, you can do that by placing a tilde sign(~) immediately before the search term.
For eg:
to search for food facts and nutrition and cooking information use
~food ~facts.

Limiting search to a domain

Include site: in your search string, Google will restrict the results to those websites in the given domain. For eg: downloads site:www.microsoft.com will find pages about downloads within www.microsoft.com. download site:com will find pages about download within .com urls. Please note there can be no space between the "site:" and the domain.

Other Searching options

If you use allintitle: at the start of search string, Google will restrict the results to those with all of the search words in the title. For eg: allintitle: Windows Vista will return only documents that have both "Windows" and "Vista" in the title.

If you use intitle: in your search string, Google will restrict the results to documents containing that word in the title. For eg: intitle:Windows Vista will return documents that mention the word "Windows" in their title, and mention the word "Vista" anywhere in the document (title or no). Please Note there can be no space between the "intitle:" and the following word.

Putting intitle: in front of every word in your search is equivalent to putting allintitle: at the front of your search string intitle:Windows intitle:Vista is the same as allintitle:Windows vista.

If you use allinurl: in your search string, Google will restrict the results to those with all of the query words in the url. For eg: allinurl:Windows Vista will return only documents that have both "Windows" and "Vista" in the url.

Note that allinurl: works on words, not url components. In particular, it ignores punctuation. Thus, allinurl:Windows/Vista will restrict the results to page with the words "Windows" and "Vista" in the url, but won't require that they be separated by a slash within that url, that they be adjacent, or that they be in that particular word order. There is currently no way to enforce these constraints.

If you use inurl: in your search string, Google will restrict the results to documents containing that word in the url. For eg: inurl:Windows Vista will return documents that mention the word "Windows" in their url, and mention the word "Vista" anywhere in the document (url or not). Please note there can be no space between the "inurl:" and the following word.

Putting "inurl:" in front of every word in your query is equivalent to putting "allinurl:" at the front of your search string inurl:Windows inurl:Vista is the same as allinurl: Windows Vista.
posted by TechFreeks @ 4:50 PM  
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