
You can search for any word or phrase on a Web site by typing the word or phrase into a query form and clicking the button to execute the query.
Searches produce a list of files that contain the word or phrase no matter where they appear in the text. This list gives the rules for formulating queries:
Consecutive words are treated as a phrase; they must appear in the same order within a matching document.
Queries are case-insensitive, so you can type your query in uppercase or lowercase.
You can search for any word except for those in the exception list (for English, this includes a, an, and, as, and other common words), which are ignored during a search.
Punctuation marks such as the period (.), colon (:), semicolon (;), and comma (,) are ignored during a search.
To use specially treated characters such as &, |, ^, #, @, $, (, ), in a query, enclose your query in quotation marks ().
To search for a word or phrase containing quotation marks, enclose the entire phrase in quotation marks and then double the quotation marks around the word or words you want to surround with quotes. For example, World-Wide Web or Web searches for World-Wide Web or Web.
You can insert boolean operators (AND, OR, and NOT) and the (NEAR) to specify additional search information.
The wildcard character (*) can match words with a given prefix. The query esc* matches the terms ESC, escape, and so on.
Note: Scriptural reference searching is not fully functional and will yield mixed results at this time.