Citations Analyzer
This analyzer deals with the queries containing short popular citations. Often coming from some literary source, these citations are massively used in everyday speech, and this obviously complicates your quest, if you want to know where does a specific catch phrase come from. Whether the original is a vastly popular work of fiction, or some obliterated philosophical treatise, the chances are high that you will only stumble upon multiple examples of the citation used as such, without any reference to its source. For example, 'what's in a rose' is likely to yield all possible results, from the site of Sweet Briar College to Ethnobotanical Society, before Shakespeare comes into view.
The analyzer examines 100 queries that consist of a popular citation, the source of which is known. For each search engine we calculate the percentage of the search results containing at least one of the following: a. the given fragment (or one of several fragments) of the text where the citation comes from or b. the name of the author and the title of the text. The positions of the pages among the search results are not taken into consideration.
- 90−100%
- 80−90%
- 60−80%
- 40−60%
- 20−40%
- 0−20%
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