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Tips On SearchingHere you will find help with searching on the site. You can search the articles and the grant listings, and the job announcements. You may also wish to see additional tips on searching the grants.
The simplest search is to enter words or phrases that you want to find. If you enter multiple words or phrases separated by commas, the search engine will find all articles or ads that contain any of those words. For example, you might enter:
United Way, philanthropyYou would then get all items that mention either United Way or philanthropy. (Case doesn't matter in searching, so you could use united way or United Way.) The search engine will also give you related words and phrases. For example, a search for meet will also return items that contain meet or meeting. If you want to limit your search to an exact word or phrase, put it in double quotation marks: "meet." A simple query such as United Way, charity will return items about about United Way, about charity, and about both. If you want to find only articles that contain both terms, you can use and to be more specific. You could enter:
United Way and charityThat will return only items that contain both United Way and charity, so the list will be shorter than the results of the query written using a comma. If you want to actually search for the word and as part of a phrase, place it inside quotation marks. For example, to search for the phrase charities and foundations, you would enter:
charities "and" foundationsExcluding terms You might want to specifically exclude certain items from your search. For example, you might want to see those that mention the Ford Foundation but not the Salvation Army. You could enter:
ford foundation not salvation armyYou will get only articles orn ads referring to Ford Foundation that do not also mention Salvation Army. If an article includes both Ford Foundation and Salvation Army, it will be excluded. Here are some other ways you can refine your search: Asterisk: If you are not sure how a word is spelled or want to be sure to catch all variations of a word, you can use an asterisk. For example, philanthrop* would find articles or ads containing philanthropy, philanthopist, philanthropic, etc. The asterisk can be used at the beginning or the end of a word. Question mark: You can use a question mark to replace specific characters if you are not sure of the spelling or want to be sure to catch multiple variations. For example, princip??s would find items containing both principles and principals. <near>: Searches for two words near one another. For example, United <near> Way will search for the word United close to Way. <sentence>: Searches for two words in the same sentence. For example, charitable <sentence> contributions. <paragraph>: Searches for two words in the same paragraph. For example, planned <paragraph> giving. Note: In searches using near, sentence, or paragraph, the closer the two words are to each other, the higher the article or ad will appear in a list that is ranked by relevance. Note also that near, sentence, and paragraph must be enclosed in angle brackets. By default our search program uses "relevance ranking" to display results. That is, those documents that have the most words that match your search terms are presented first. Those with the fewest (which are often only marginally relevant) are at the bottom of the list. The higher the percentage displayed before the title, the more relevant the article or ad. You may choose to have results displayed in "reverse date ranking." Here the results are listed newest to oldest. Just check the appropriate box on the search page. U.R.L. stands for uniform resource locator. It's Web lingo for addresses (like http://philanthropy.com). Checking the option box marked "Include article U.R.L.'s" will force the search engine to show you the Web address of each article or ad. You might find this useful if, for example, you want to send the address to a colleague.
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