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CAPITALIZATION
Google searches are NOT case sensitive. All letters, regardless of how you type them, will be understood as lower
case.
For example, searches for george washington, George Washington, and gEoRgE wAsHiNgToN will all
return the same results.
A U T O M A T I C “A N D ” T E R M
By default, Google only returns pages that include all of your search terms. There is no need to include "and"
between terms. Keep in mind that the order in which the terms are typed will affect the search results. To
restrict a search further, just include more terms.
P L U S (+) O P E R A T O R
Google ignores common words and characters such as where, the, how, and other digits and letters that slow
down your search without improving the results. If a common word is essential to getting the results you want,
you can make sure we pay attention to it by putting a "+" sign in front of it. (Be sure to include a space before the
"+" sign.)
"OR " S E A R C H
To find pages that include either of two search terms, add an uppercase OR between the terms.
For example, here's how to search for a vacation in either London or Paris:
NEGATIVE TERMS
If your search term has more than one meaning (bass, for example, could refer to fishing or music) you can focus
your search by putting a minus sign ("-") in front of words related to the meaning you want to avoid.
For example, here's how you'd find pages about bass-heavy lakes, but not bass-heavy music:
bass –music
Google Search
SYNONYM SEARCH
If you want to search not only for your search term but also for its synonyms, place the tilde sign (~) immediately in
front of your search term.
~term~term
PHRASE SEARCHES
Sometimes you'll only want results that include an exact phrase. In this case, simply put quotation marks around
your search terms.
“I’ M F E E L I N G L U C K Y ”
After you've entered your search terms, you might want to try the I'm Feeling Lucky button, which takes you
straight to the most relevant website that Google found for your query. You won't see the search results page at
all, but if you did, the "I'm Feeling Lucky" site would be listed on top.
For example, if you're looking for the Stanford University homepage, just enter Stanford and click I'm Feeling Lucky
instead of the Google Search button. Google will take you directly to www.stanford.edu.
Google Search
DEFINE
Looks up one definition for the word or term.
define word
DEFINE:
The query [define:] will provide a definition of the words you enter after it, gathered from various online sources.
The definition will be for the entire phrase entered.
define:cacophony
WEATHER
weather city, state or zip code
TIME
time city, state or zip code
LOCAL SEARCH
If you’re looking for a store, restaurant, or other local business you can search for the category of business and the
location and we’ll return results right on the page, along with a map, reviews, and contact information.
MOVIE SHOWTIMES
To find reviews and showtimes for movies playing near you, type "movies" or the name of a current film into the
Google search box. If you've already saved your location on a previous search, the top search result will display
showtimes for nearby theaters for the movie you've chosen.
PATENT NUMBERS
To search for U.S. patents, enter the word "patent" followed by the patent number into the Google search box and
hit the Enter key or click the Google Search button.
patent #
PACKAGE TRACKING
You can track packages by typing the tracking number for your UPS, Fedex or USPS package directly into the search
box. We’ll return results that include quick links to easily track the status of your shipment.
package number
AREA CODE
To see the geographical location for any U.S. telephone area code, just type the three-digit area code into the
Google search box and hit the Enter key or click the Google Search button.
area code
Google Search
NUMRANGE SEARCH
Feel like a number? Numrange searches for results containing numbers in a given range. Just add two numbers,
separated by two periods, with no spaces, into the search box along with your search terms. You can use
Numrange to set ranges for everything from dates (Willie Mays 1950..1960) to weights (5000..10000 kg truck).
But be sure to specify a unit of measurement or some other indicator of what the number range represents.
CALCULATOR
To use the calculator function just type the calculation followed by an equal sign
Calculation=
UNIT CONVERSION
# unit in unit
CURRENCY CONVERSION
To use our built-in currency converter, simply enter the conversion you’d like done into the Google search box and
we’ll provide your answer directly on the results page.
# unit in unit
Google Search
DOMAIN SEARCH
You can use Google to search only within one specific website by entering the search terms you're looking for,
followed by the word "site" and a colon followed by the domain name.
term site:www.website.com
RELATED SEARCH
To search for web pages that have similar content to a given site, type "related:" followed by the website address
into the Google search box.
related:www.website.com
INFO:
The query [info:] will present some information that Google has about that web page. For instance,
[info:www.google.com] will show information about the Google homepage.
info:www.google.com
LINK:
The query [link:] will list webpages that have links to the specified webpage. For instance, [link:www.google.com]
will list webpages that have links pointing to the Google homepage.
link:www.google.com
ALLINTITLE:
If you start a query with [allintitle:], Google will restrict the results to those with all of the query words in the title.
For instance, [allintitle: google search] will return only documents that have both "google" and "search" in the title.
allintitle:google search
INTITLE:
If you include [intitle:] in your query, Google will restrict the results to documents containing that word in the title.
For instance, [intitle:google search] will return documents that mention the word "google" in their title, and
mention the word "search" anywhere in the document (title or no). Note there can be no space between the
"intitle:" and the following word.
Putting [intitle:] in front of every word in your query is equivalent to putting [allintitle:] at the front of your query:
[intitle:google intitle:search] is the same as [allintitle: google search].
intitle:google intitle:search
Google Search
ALLINURL:
If you start a query with [allinurl:], Google will restrict the results to those with all of the query words in the url. For
instance, [allinurl: google search] will return only documents that have both "google" and "search" in the url.
Note that [allinurl:] works on words, not url components. In particular, it ignores punctuation. Thus, [allinurl:
foo/bar] will restrict the results to page with the words "foo" and "bar" 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.
allinurl:google search
INURL:
If you include [inurl:] in your query, Google will restrict the results to documents containing that word in the url.
For instance, [inurl:google search] will return documents that mention the word "google" in their url, and mention
the word "search" anywhere in the document (url or no). 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 query:
[inurl:google inurl:search] is the same as [allinurl: google search].
inurl:google inurl:search
IMAGESIZE:
To search for wallpapers of a certain size, you can use the image size operator that lets you specify the exact
dimensions of the results. You can also use the operator to find other images of a certain size.
imagesize:widthxheight term
imagesize:640x480 beach Finds wallpapers that are 640x480 in size and related to beaches
Google Search
SEARCH RESULTS PAGE
Google Search
A. Google navigation bar
Click the link for the Google service you want to use. You can search the web, browse for images, news,
maps and videos, and navigate to Gmail and other Google products.
B. Search field
To do a search on Google, just type in a few descriptive search terms, then hit Enter on your keyboard or
click the Search button.
C. Search button
Click this button to submit a search query. You can also submit your query by hitting the Enter key.
D. Advanced search
This links to a page on which you can do more precise searches
E. Preferences
This links to a page that lets you set your personal search preferences, including your language, the
number of results you'd like to see per page, and whether you want your search results screened by our
SafeSearch filter to avoid seeing adult material.
F. Search statistics
This line describes your search and indicates the total number of results, as well as how long the search
took to complete.
G. Top contextual navigation links
These dynamic links suggest content types that are most relevant to your search term. You can click any
of these links in order to see more results of a particular content type.
H. Integrated results
Google's search technology looks across all types of content and ranks the results that are most relevant
to your search. Your results may be from multiple content types, including images, news, books, maps and
videos.
I. Page title
The first line of any search result item is the title of the webpage that we found. If you see a URL instead
of a title, then either the page has no title or we haven't yet indexed that page's full content, but its place
in our index still tells us that it's a good match for your query.
J. Text below the title
This is an excerpt from the results page with your query terms bolded. If we expanded the range of your
search using stemming technology, the variations of your search terms that we searched for will also be
bolded.
K. URL of result
This is the web address of the returned result.
L. Size
This number is the size of the text portion of the web page, and gives you some idea of how quickly it
might display. Size figure don't appear for sites that are not yet indexed.
M. Cached
Clicking this link will show you the contents of the web page when we last indexed it. If for some reason
the site link doesn't connect you to the current page, you might still find the information you need in the
cached version.
Google Search
N. Similar pages
When you select the Similar Pages link for a particular result, Google automatically scouts the Web for
pages that are related to this result.
O. Indented result
When Google finds multiple results from the same website, the most relevant result is listed first, with
other relevant pages from that site indented below it.
P. More results
If we find more than two results from the same site, the remaining results can be accessed by clicking the
More results from link.
Q. Plus Box results
Clicking the "plus box" icon reveals additional info about your search result. You'll see this feature for
pages related to publicly traded U.S. stocks, local businesses, and Google and YouTube videos.
R. Related search terms
Sometimes the best search terms for what you're looking for are related to the ones you actually entered.
Click these related search terms to see alternate search results.
Google Search
FEATURES: SEARCHWIKI
SEARCHWIKI
SearchWiki lets you customize your Google Web Search results by ranking, removing, and adding notes to them.
You'll see your changes whenever you do the same searches while signed in to your Google Account, or until you
decide to undo them. You can also see how other users have tailored any given search results page with their own
notes and changes.
Your rankings and comments are associated with your Google Account, so they affect only your search result
rankings. A listing of your changes is visible on your 'SearchWiki notes' page, which is visible only to you.