You do not need to enter an author’s last name first, nor do you need an exact title or subject heading as
all searches are keyword search. Evergreen is also forgiving about plurals and alternate verb endings, so
if you enter dogs, Evergreen will also find items with dog.
Do not use an AND operator to join search terms.
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An AND operator is automatically used to join all search terms. So, a search for golden compass will
search for entries that contain both golden and compass.
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Boolean operators such as and, or, not are not considered special and are searched for like any
other word. So, a title search for golden and compass will not return the title golden compass. Putting
it another way, there are no stop words that are automatically ignored by the search engine. So, a title
search for the, and, or, not (in any order) yields a list of titles with those words.
Don’t worry about white space, exact punctuation, or capitalization.
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White spaces before or after a word are ignored. So, search for golden compass gives the same results
as a search for golden compass.
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A double dash or a colon between words is reduced to a blank space. So, a title search for
golden:compass or golden—compass is equivalent to golden compass.
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Punctuation marks occurring at the front or end of a word are removed.
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Diacritical marks, &, or | located anywhere in the search term but not within a word are removed. Words
linked together by . (dot) are separated into two words. So, a search for |golden.compass& is equivalent
to golden compass.
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Upper and lower case letters are equivalent. So, Golden Compass is the same as golden compass.
Enter your search words in any order. A search for compass golden gives the same results as a search
for golden compass. Adding more search words gives fewer and more specific results.
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This is also true for author searches. Both David Suzuki and Suzuki, David will return results for
the same author.
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Use specific search terms. Evergreen will search for the words you specify, not the meanings, so choose
search terms that are likely to appear in an item description. For example, the search luxury hotels will
produce more relevant results than nice places to stay.
Search for an exact phrase using double-quotes. For example, “golden compass”.
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The order of words is important for an exact phrase search. “golden compass” is different than
“compass golden”.
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White space, punctuation and capitalization are removed from exact phrases as described above. So a
phrase retains its search terms and its relative order, but not special characters, such as a + (plus),
and not case.
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Two phrases are joined by AND, so a search for “golden compass” “dark materials” is equivalent to
“golden compass” and “dark materials”.
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To prevent stemming, use double quotes around a single word or a phrase. So, a search
for parenting will also return results for parental but a search for “parenting” will not.
See Stemming in.
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Use * (asterisk) as a wildcard to truncate search terms, e.g. comp* golden may return the same results
for compass golden and more.
Exclude a term from the search, using - (minus) . For example, vacations –britain will search for
materials on vacations that do not make reference to Britain.
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Two excluded words are joined by AND. So, a search for -harry -potter is equivalent to
-harry and -potter.
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A + (plus) leading a term has no role and is removed. So, +golden +compass is equivalent to
golden compass.
You can form more complex searches using the Advanced Search features.
Improving a Search With No Results
If no results were returned from your search, you will see Keyword Search Tips for expanding or altering
your search.