Search features
This website contains many types of texts, including:
- scholarly articles, biographies etc. written in modern Canadian English;
- semi-diplomatic transcriptions of 19th-century texts that
reproduce the inconsistent spellings typical of printed and manuscript
texts from this period;
- site informational pages; and
- technical project documentation.
Although you can search the whole site (the default behaviour if you do not choose
any search filters), it will often
be more efficient to select one or more of the document types or statuses in the checkbox
lists on the search page to search only a subset of the collection. There are many
search filters that can help you
narrow down the number of results.
This is a stemming search engine, so generally speaking, if you search for a word
such as love, the
search engine will apply stemming and return related
forms such as loving and loves. For finer
control, there are two wild-card characters that can be used in searches:
asterisk (*) and question mark (?). An asterisk represents zero or more
characters; a question mark represents a single character. A wild-card
search allows you to truncate endings, so that a search for
usur* will return results that include
usury, usurie, and
usurer. The wild card can also be used within a
word to return all possible variations in that position. For example, a
search for w*ld would return
wild, world, and
withheld, and so on. Combining internal and terminal wild cards
would return more variants. For example, w?ld* would
yield results that include wild,
wildest, and wilderness.
You can also use plus and minus signs to specify that a term must or must not be in
the results.
For example, searching for +love +like -hate will find documents that
contain both love and like
but not hate.
If you are searching for a proper name, use appropriate capitalization, and also quotation
marks. For example,
to search for someone called Spearing, use "Spearing". This ensures that stemming
does not take place,
meaning that only instances of the exact name will be found, not spear
, speared
,
and so on.