You can learn more about how to get the most out of a Google search here.
Some additional resources include:
This tool uses the same operators as Boolean and X-Ray*.* See the image below if you are unfamiliar with the search form. You can access it by clicking on this link. Or, on the Google search page, go to Settings, and under the section Using Search, click on Advanced Search.
<aside> 🌐 This is what Google’s Advanced Search page looks like:
https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/n_z1AuSq4xgtv_ntd11Sl1TxtKTL9k30dM9aUYXnPd5OlfZJgVo4lJpjc2GK6HXTyOTgGj35TKRQo3e21O7PxbsAqCuHslWWsA6ZN29tCQ_SKMLi9k6pAoevEbXJd9NeWs3u_XQ_bo8GbBtHKQ
</aside>
We only need the first half of the page to do a Boolean search.
<aside> 🌐 The first half of the search form.
https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/2tb1NZVN2FRqHHT0X9rqgqtfsQ8ZA9lxtY7uMXnZ4ilXGfXpVMERkm--xmwdiIyoBaLqm2WdxBL1vJegQ00pnhsSMcjNQquLcDvZuxLx2HHtx_liBNyHp1M_HLLRYMy2RIJ6hK4jf7KPmhdAcw
</aside>
This is what the different boxes in this section do:
all these words: here keywords are entered that Google can broadly search throughout the whole web page. For example:
You type: green hydrogen ➡️ Google searches: green hydrogen