Forum Moderators: open
To provide the most accurate results, Google does not use "stemming" or support "wildcard" searches. In other words, Google searches for exactly the words that you enter in the search box. Searching for "googl" or "googl*" will not yield "googler" or "googlin". If in doubt, try both forms: "airline" and "airlines," for instance. -- [google.com...]
However, it appears that word-variations still add weight for a given phrase.
You can notice this when you search for a phrase, 2.3 million results are returned, the #1 result only has the root phrase once (in the meta description), but a variation of the phrase is repeated numerous times throughout the page. If stemming wasn't coming in to play, then the lower result pages that have a higher PageRank and higher keyword density for the root phrase would be returned above it. NOTE: I could not find any link text with the related phrase pointing back to the page.
Thoughts?
Since the -link: thing stopped I can't seem to do the same searches.
Searching for widge*... [google.com...]
Searching for webmasterwo*....
[google.com...]
As many as I could find. Does anyone else have data on to support or deny this theory?
- ranked #1 for a query in the form "blue widgets" (second word pluralized) (of ~60,000 results)
-ranked #161 for the singular form "blue widget" (of ~80,000 results)
The plural form ("widgets") appears in the site title, meta description, and body. The singular form ("widget") appears in meta description and body.
Because SERPS and PR are complicated things, it is very poor science to try to extract a "does or doesn't" from the results to prove a single point. You don't have anywhere near all the data, so it is hard to tell which of many factors is causing the problem.
Remember, most people involved in auto accidents also ate a meal within 4 hours of driving their cars. Therefore, eating could be a cause of auto accidents! :-)
Alex