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      index.html / bots.htm / termisearch.htm 
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      Updated 25/MAI/2007, version 0.09  | 
  
    
      HOW TO BUILD A An example: | 
    
                
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      GOOGLE PRE-FILTER Termisearch | 
      Introduction      Structure of a pre-filter
      
      
A working example: Termisearch:   English    Italian    French    Spanish    German     
 
 
  
 
 
 This approach is just a 
proof of concept, hence, of course, in fieri.
You can modify the forms on this page in order to search for different targets: images, music, porn, books, solutions, confidential 
documents, passwords or whatever. 
With the  Termisearch working example, below, I offer a linguistic (imho 
quite interesting) approach just in order to demonstrate the utility and potential effectiveness of such simple filter tools.
     
In fact
the whole point of the "Termisearch" example below is to demonstrate how such "pre-filtering" approaches 
can go beyond simple "webbit" results. Of course Thou does not need to go linguistic. 
You will create your own pre-filtering forms at leisure using the schema below. 
You may want to fine-tune special pre-filtering forms in order to search more effectively for books or images (eliminating 
from the SERPs all those idiot sites that try to
 'trap' searchers into advertisement hells or lists of crippled results for zombies).
 
Or maybe you want to retrieve MP3s or OGGs without having to wade knee-deep into morons trying "to sell" you those very
songs (quelle vulgarité!). Or whatever on such lines... I'm sure you get the infinite searching possibilities now in your own hands :-)
The Termisearch forms are experimental and must, should and can be further fine-tuned. Note that we can 
also further fine-tune things there "subtracting words", thus eliminating less useful results that 
often/always contain such words, see Termisearch's Spanish 
example.
The Termisearch example also shows that 
one 
drawback of using  linguistic approaches is that this will work 
quite well for languages that have great amounts of indexed pages/occurrences, 
but  won't give good results for 'smaller' languages.
So, does the "web at 
large" deliver better terminological quality (and quicker and to no cost) than 
 trusted tools and dictionaries? Of course not, or at least not always. But 
the 'termisearch' small tool below may still prove useful for linguists. Of course the results 
will vary depending of the 'notoriety' and 'trendiness' of your query... such are 
the tides of the Web. 
  
Structure of a pre-filter    
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See the complete code of all the various Termisearch forms below (with Opera: CTRL+F3), here just an 
 example taken from 
the Spanish termisearch form below.
<form target="_blank" name="gs" action="http://www.google.com/search" onsubmit="return ShowFormWarning()"  method="get">   
What and where we do
<input size="30" name="q">   
Width of the input field
<input type="hidden" value="100" name="num">   
How many results per page we want 
<input type="hidden" value="off" name="safe">   
No puritanical crap  
<input type="hidden" value="en" name="hl">   
Englisz for broadness 
<input type="hidden" name="lr">   
Parameter 'language restrict' ignored here 
<input type="hidden" value="ISO-8859-1" name="ie">   
Input Encoding - this parameter is deprecated and  
ignored. Use UTF-8 encoding instead unless you know what you are doing. 
<input type="hidden" value="en.espanol se.dice denominado denominada se.usa que.significa" name="as_oq">   
as_oq:
The real important ORRED terms 
<input type="hidden" value="libros.en.espanol" name="as_eq">   
as_eq: 
What we do not want 
<input class="submit" type="submit" value="Button_text" name="btnG">   
Gimme a nice button text for submitting
<input type="hidden" value="0" name="filter">    
Uh? "repeat the search with the omitted results included?" Yep, please
</form>
So, that's the theory, now, as an unrelated example, look at the following banal 'book searching' mask:
 
BOOK SEARCHING (1) (2) (3) 
"rapidshare OR megaupload OR yousendit OR filefactory 
 OR filedepot"
"NOT amazon NOT sex NOT tits NOT win"
1) Change the book title according to your taste and inclination, duh
2) Always use the CACHED copies of google's results to bypass simple locks, duh
3) Exempli gratia, try inputting java.in.a.nutshell or more simply in.a.nutshell to check spreads
However, as said, this pre-filtering approach can deliver results that go 
waay beyond such 'webbit similar' book findings, as my 
'termisearch' example below will (I hope) demonstrate.
  
The 'termisearch' example    
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The raison d'être of the very simple forms given on the Termisearch working example is to find 
definitions, possible translations and/or explanations of a given term IN ANOTHER 
LANGUAGE CONTEXT. 
So, for instance, to check how "offshore.outsourcing" has been/is usually translated INTO GERMAN (or INTO FRENCH, or 
INTO ITALIAN, etc.) Or, the other way round, how  "Weltanschauung" or, say,  
 "lavoro 
interinale" has been/is 
usually translated INTO ENGLISH. 
Or the real meaning of a proverb... or whatever on these lines.
This is below simply done 
adding, subtracting or ORring  
automatically some ad hoc search terms to whatever query you may have. 
Use 
quotes around your searching terms for exact match (or join them through a 
dot)
Therefore: "offshore outsourcing" or offshore.outsourcing, else you'll gather pages with only offshore and/or with only outsourcing
"meaning 
OR translated OR means OR in.english"
"chiamato.anche 
OR vuol.dire OR che.significa OR vuole.dire OR in.italiano OR 
si.intende"
"le.mot OR 
littéralement OR signifie OR veut.dire"
"en.espanol 
OR se.dice OR denominado OR denominada OR se.usa OR 
que.significa"
"NOT libros.en.espanol"
"übersetzt 
OR heisst OR auf.deutsch OR heisst.auf.deutsch"

 
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