googl e
googl e.com is the best search engine
available on the web with more than 2 million searches daily, goggle
it to see the best results. Google provides you the most relevant search results from millions of
websites that are spidered by google regularly. Googl
turkey
These are a couple of very nice features for those who know what
they are doing.
Google's search offers
lot more than just typing in the search terms. The Google Advanced
Search, you can search only for pages:
that contain ALL the search
terms you type in
that contain the exact phrase
you type in
that contain at least one of the
words you type in
that do NOT contain any of the
words you type in
written in a certain language
created in a certain file format
that have been updated within a
certain period of time
that contain numbers within a
certain range
within a certain domain, or
website
that don't contain
"adult" material
Advanced Operators
Google supports several advanced
operators, which are query words that have special meaning to
Google. Lest consider the "link" command : if you do
link:www.yoursitename.com goggle
will provide you with then number of back-links that the website
has. This may not be up-to-date but googl e surely values links :)
All the information that is listed
below has been shared from:
If you include [site:
] in your query, Google will restrict the results to those
websites in the given domain. For instance, [help
site:www.google.com] will find pages about help within
www.google.com. [help site:com] will find pages about help
within .com urls. Note there can be no space between the
"site:" and the domain.
This functionality is also
available through Advanced
Search page, under Advanced Web Search > Domains.
allintitle:
[Usage]
allintitle:search phrase
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.
This functionality is also
available through Advanced
Search page, under Advanced Web Search >
Occurrences.
intitle:
[Usage]
intitle:search phrase
It will restrict the results to
documents containing that word in the title. For instance, [intitle:googl e
search] will return documents that mention the word "googl e"
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].
allinurl:
[Usage]
allinurl:search phrase
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 "goggle"
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.
This functionality is also
available through Advanced
Search page, under Advanced Web Search >
Occurrences.
inurl:
[Usage]
inurl:search phrase
It will restrict the results to
documents containing that word in the url. For instance, [inurl:google
search] will return documents that mention the word "googl e"
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:transfer
inurl:search] is the same as [allinurl: transfer search].