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English 151 / GASP 103S (Brokaw)

Advanced Shakespeare

Boolean Operators (AND, OR, NOT)

Boolean operators such as AND (narrows) and OR (broadens) are used to join search terms together.

Use OR to broaden your search. For example, if you search advertising OR commercials, you will find articles that include both terms.

Boolean - OR: advertising OR commercials

 

In contrast, use AND and NOT to narrow your search. For example, if you search advertising AND commercials, you will only find articles that include both terms.

Boolean - AND: advertising AND commercials

And, if you search advertising NOT commercials, you will find articles that include the word advertising except for those that also include the term commercials. In Google, use a minus sign instead of NOT (e.g. advertising -commercials).

Boolean - NOT. Advertising NOT commercials

Truncation

Truncation allows a search engine to look for variant endings of a word. Use a symbol (* is the most common) at the end of a truncated word. Truncation broadens or expands your search.

  • perform* will search for perform, performs, performance, performers, etc.
  • colleg* finds college, collegium, collegial
  • politic* will search for politic, politics, political, politicly, etc.

Some databases also allow you to use a symbol at the beginning or in the middle of a word

  • col*r will search for color or colour
  • *politic will search overpolitic, prepolitic, pseudopolitic, etc.

Mash them Up

You can use multiple search strategies simultaneously.

Example: A screen capture of the advanced search screen in the MLA International bibliography showing a search for "midsummer night's dream" AND power* AND (gender or sex)

"midsummer night's dream"

AND

power*

AND

gender OR sex

The screenshot above shows the advanced search screen. This same search can also be done in a basic search screen:

A screen capture of the basic search screen in the MLA International bibliography showing a search for "midsummer night's dream" AND power* AND (gender or sex)

NOTE: Boolean or Logic Operators (AND, OR, and NOT) work best in all caps, but some databases will recognize them in lowercase.

Quotation Marks

Quotation Marks are used to search for a specific phrase when the words need to be in a specific order to convey their meaning. This strategy will limit or narrow your search in a way that is targeted or strategic to get the information you want.

  • "Midsummer Night's Dream"
  • "theater history"
  • "historical context"