بنقرة واحدة
blog-exact-quote
// Use quotation marks around unique phrases or titles from blog posts for exact-match searching
// Use quotation marks around unique phrases or titles from blog posts for exact-match searching
French Wikipedia is the key data source for finding European actors' full birth names
Director-Film-Actor triangulation — locate the target actor through the director's other works
Two-phase search — first find the actor's stage name, then specifically search for their full birth name
Always add Bollywood/Hindi film/Indian actor keywords when searching for Indian actors
Track Indian actors through family chains — grandfather/father/spouse relationships are key indirect clues
Entity hypothesis — guess candidate Indian actors first, then verify against question constraints
| name | blog_exact_quote |
| description | Use quotation marks around unique phrases or titles from blog posts for exact-match searching |
| always | true |
When a question references a specific phrase, title, quote, or colloquial expression from a blog or article. Also useful when the question mentions a creative work title used as a blog post title.
Unique phrases in blogs — titles, memorable quotes, colloquial expressions — are extremely effective when searched with quotation marks. Without quotes, these phrases get broken into individual words and drowned in noise.
Identify the most distinctive multi-word phrase from the question and wrap it in quotation marks. Combine with supplementary context keywords (year, author type, topic) to narrow results.
"[unique phrase]" [supplementary context]"[title fragment]" [author name] [website name]blog 2015 2016 2017 loss parent death anxiety mourning monthsIgnoring quoted search — unique phrases from blogs get drowned in noise without quotation marks, returning thousands of irrelevant results.