Google: search tips
Google is a powerful search engine. But the results list can be endlessly long and at page 3 you still haven't found what you were looking for. These tips and tricks will help you specify a better search question.
- Use unique, specific terms (keywords, not sentences). E.g. search for "headache" instead of "my head hurts"
- Don't worry about spelling. Google's spell checker automatically uses the most common spelling of a given word
- Make use of the auto-complete function. Interesting suggestions can help you narrow your search. Start typing "Ghent University" and get suggestions like "Ghent University library", "Ghent University hospital", "Ghent University logo"
- Use double quotes (“”) to search for an exact phrase.
"what does Ghent University stand for" - Use "OR" (in capitals!) or "|" to search for several terms.
Jon OR Jonathan Tennant or Jon | Jonathan Tennant - Some input is neglected in a search, like interpunction, meaningless words. If you want to include them, use single quotes (' ').
'de' garage gent - Use an asterisk (*) to complete a phrase with an unknown word.
"Winston * Churchill"
"a bird in the hand is worth * in the bush" - Search in a particular website with "site:".
site:eoswetenschap.eu darwin - With "site:" you can also specify that you only want to search websites from a particular country, e.g. only from the Netherlands (site:nl), Belgium (site:be), Germany (site:de), France (site:fr) or the UK (site:uk). There are hundreds of such top-level domains, as they are officially called. For an overview, see the Wikipedia page List of top-level domains on the internet.
site:uk driving licence - Exclude terms using a dash (-).
"-site:wikipedia.org" to avoid results from Wikipedia - "filetype:" will restrict search results to a particular file type. For example:
"filetype:pdf health" will only return search results for PDF files with the word “health” in them
"filetype:ppt travel" will only return search results for powerpoint presentations containing the word "travel" - Only search the term in the title: "intitle:" for one word, "allintitle:" for several words. Alternatively, to find words in the text you can use "intext:"
intitle:beer
allintitle:beer contest - Find related websites to the one you already know.
related:eoswetenschap.eu - Convert measurements in no time.
16 lb to kg - Search in the website you have found: push the buttons "Ctrl" and "f" (find) at the same time and a search box will open
- Try using Google's advanced search: google.com/advanced_search
Want to find out more? Check out these sources:
Official Google Search Tips & Tricks site: Google help Center (accessed 2024/08/30)
Wincher: wincher.com/blog/google-search-operators (accessed 2024/08/30)
More tips
- Google Books: what is it? (Search / find)
- Google Scholar (Search / find)
Translated tip
Last modified Sept. 10, 2024, 4:31 p.m.