Tips For More Effective Googling

intitle
Matches the following keyword against Web page titles in Google's index. Dramatically narrows results and makes them more relevant. For example, intitle: dog training, displays Web pages with dog in the title and training in the title or page.

allintitle
Forces all the following keywords to match against Web page titles in Google's index. Narrows results even more than intitle. For example, allintitle: dog training displays Web pages with both dog and training in the title.

inurl
Matches the following keyword against URLs (addresses) in Google's index. Severely narrows results and makes them highly relevant. For example, with inurl:fleet online banking, the results would have fleet in the URL and online and banking in the URL (not likely) or the page (likely).

allinurl
Forces all the following keywords to match against URLs in Google's index. Ferociously restricts search results. For example, with allinurl:yankees tickets, the results would have both yankees and tickets in the page URL.

filetype
Restricts the keyword search to results of a certain file type, such as Adobe Acrobat .pdf files or Microsoft Word .doc files. Excellent for conducting research. Example: speed of light filetype:pdf. link

link
Finds incoming links to whatever URL you provide after the operator. The search displays sites that contain links to the specified URL. Example: link:www.blablabla.com

info
When paired with a URL, this operator displays links to further information about the specified site. Example: info:www.youtube.com

cache
Displays Google's cached (stored) snapshot of whatever URL follows the operator. Good for taking a short hop back in time. Example: cache:www.blablabla.com

site
One of the most important operators, this one restricts search results to a specified URL. Works with top-level domain extensions such as .edu and .gov by themselves in place of a specific site URL. Example: yankees red sox site:www.lapd.com