Thank you for accepting my suggestion of the 'inurl' operator as the
answer to your question.
Google Web Search: inurl:kintera
://www.google.com/search?hl=en&ie=UTF-8&q=inurl%3Akintera
"inurl:
If you include [inurl:] in your query, Google will restrict the
results to documents containing that word in the url. For instance,
[inurl:google search] will return documents that mention the word
'google' in their url, and mention the word 'search' anywhere in the
document (url or no). Note there can be no space between the 'inurl:'
and the following word.
Putting 'inurl:' in front of every word in your query is equivalent to
putting 'allinurl:' at the front of your query: [inurl:google
inurl:search] is the same as [allinurl: google search]."
Advanced Search Operators
://www.google.com/help/operators.html#inurl
The similar operator 'allinurl' is useful for finding URLs that
include more than one word. 'Allinurl' works like 'inurl' if, as in
this case, only a single word is of interest:
Google Web Search: allinurl:kintera
://www.google.com/search?hl=en&ie=UTF-8&q=allinurl%3Akintera
If you use the Google Advanced Search page, you can easily access this
feature through the "Occurrences" dropdown list box (select 'in the
URL of the page'):
Google Advanced Search
://www.google.com/advanced_search
I hope this is helpful! Please let me know if anything is unclear, or
if a link doesn't work for you; I'll be glad to offer further
assistance before you rate my answer.
Best regards,
pinkfreud |