Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 1st Nov 2005 18:57 UTC, submitted by DigitalDame
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RE[2]: So here's an opportunity for innovation:
by on Wed 2nd Nov 2005 03:50
in reply to "RE: So here's an opportunity for innovation:"
RE[3]: So here's an opportunity for innovation:
by Temcat on Wed 2nd Nov 2005 08:13
in reply to "RE[2]: So here's an opportunity for innovation:"
RE[2]: So here's an opportunity for innovation:
by Temcat on Wed 2nd Nov 2005 08:10
in reply to "RE: So here's an opportunity for innovation:"
Sorry, at least in Google this does NOT work as you describe.
Let's enter "I've * you".
Here is a sample of the results:
I ve Got You
I ve seen things you
I've got MAYA. You
You got the idea. I need it to match *exactly* one word. In addition, I would like to have the opportunity to specify a wildcard for a specific part of speech, like this:
"I <adverb> disagree" - to find the adverbs that are normally used in this position (such as "strongly", "respectfully" etc.) This is useful if I'm not sure which word I should use so that the phrase sounds like English and not like a calque from my native language.
Edited 2005-11-02 08:16




Member since:
2005-07-06
I'm not sure exactly what you mean, but you can use wild cards in phrases, e.g. "The quick red fox * over the lazy brown dog" will find pages with either "jumped" or "jumps" (or any other word) in that position. It only matches whole words.