Search
Results 4411 - 4415 of 5861 for metal* (0.0513 seconds)
Presentations of Daniel Bleher [7.14% relevance]
future, Brochures, Presentations, potential, metals, Kreislaufführung, Articles, presentation,
http://www.ressourcenfieber.info/presentations/authors/daniel_bleher.html - 23.43 kB
Presentations of Renewable raw materials [7.14% relevance]
and land consumption, Mineral resources and metals, Renewable raw materials nachhaltigen,
http://ressourcenfieber.info/presentations/topics/renewable-raw-materials.html - 34.11 kB
Reports of Bianca Osyguß [7.14% relevance]
Brochures, Analyse, Vehicles, Optimization, Metals, Presentations, Rohstoffwirtschaft,
http://www.ressourcenfieber.info/reports/authors/hartmut_stahl.html - 54.81 kB
Presentations of Dr. Christian Hagelüken [7.14% relevance]
Presentations, recover, Articles, Brochures, metals, Reports, valuable, presentation,
http://ressourcenfieber.net/presentations/authors/chirsitan_hageluecken.html - 15.67 kB
Reports of Bianca Osyguß [7.14% relevance]
, Articles, Precious, Presentations, Metals, Deutschland, Brochures, Electronic,
http://ressourcenfieber.com/reports/authors/hartmut_stahl.html - 54.76 kB
Advanced Search
1. Keyword search
This might be the default way to use a search engine. Simply enter one or more keywords and the search engine will return all pages that contain either all keywords (AND query) or at least one keyword (OR query).
2. Wildcard search
By default, the search engine searches for exact keywords only. This means that a search for metal will not return pages containing the words metals or metallic. However, if you want to search for all words that begin with music, you can add an asterisk (*) after the keyword (metal* instead of metal). Of course, you can also put the wildcard in front of a keyword or in the middle of a keyword.
3. Phrase search
Sometimes you only need results that include an exact phrase. E.g. searching for mineral resources would also return the page where the words do not occur in the same context. To narrow your results, simply put quotation marks around your search term ("mineral
resources" instead of mineral
resources) and the search engine will only return pages that contain the exact phrase.
4. Forcing and excluding a keyword
This feature is particularly useful when you are searching for multiple keyword (OR query) but still want ensure that a page contains a certain keyword. To force a keyword, put a plus (+) in front of it (without space). To exclude a keyword, put a minus (-) in front of it. Thus, pages containing this keyword will not be returned.