What if you want to add more information about a rock band but don't care whether it's spelled "rock-n-roll," "rock and roll," "rock and roll," etc.? You can use the asterisk (*) operator as a wildcard character to replace individual words:
Wildcards behave most predictably in exact match estonia whatsapp dataestonia whatsapp data phrases, allowing you to find close matches when you can't pin your search to a single phrase. The (*) operator only works at the word level. There is no single-character wildcard operator.
11. Find terms that are close to each other.
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This is a neat example. You might expect to find results where "Tesla" and "Edison" not only appear in the document but are reasonably close to each other. The AROUND(X) operator tells Google to only return results that are within X words of each other:
A sentence like "Tesla and Thomas Edison" will show up as a similarity, but an article that mentions both people in different paragraphs will not.
12. Find exact phrase matches. |