For example, if you wanted to search @wikiHow’s tweets, you’d type wikiHow here.

The “Words” section lets you choose to see tweets that include (or don’t include) certain words and phrases. This section is great when you need to find tweets referencing certain subjects—for example, if you wanted to search all of @wikihow’s tweets for mentions of pizza, you could type pizza into the “All of these words” field. Or, for broader results about Italian food, you could type pizza pasta marinara into the “Any of these words” field. And if you didn’t want any of those results to include the word “lasagna,” you could add lasagna to the “None of these words” field. The “Filters” section lets you choose whether to include replies in your search results, as well as tweets with links. The “Engagements” section lets you choose whether to see tweets with certain amounts of likes, replies, and retweets. Use the “Dates” section to view tweets from a specific date range.

Click the Latest tab at the top of the page to view the results in chronological order. The most recent tweet matching your search criteria will appear first in the list.

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For example, if you wanted to search @wikiHow’s tweets, you’d type wikiHow here.

The “Words” section lets you choose to see tweets that include (or don’t include) certain words and phrases. This section is useful if you’re looking for tweets referencing certain topics—for example, if you wanted to see all of @wikihow’s tweets about COVID-19, you could type covid-19 into the “All of these words” field. Or, for more results, you could type covid-19 coronavirus into the “Any of these words” field. And if you didn’t want any of those results to include the word “Beyoncé,” you could add beyonce to the “None of these words” field. The “Filters” section lets you choose whether to include replies in your search results, as well as tweets with links. The “Engagements” section lets you choose whether to see tweets with certain amounts of likes, replies, and retweets. Use the “Dates” section to view tweets from a specific date range.

Tap the Latest tab at the top of the page to view the results in chronological order. The most recent tweet matching your search criteria will appear first in the list.

Search operators are special codes that refine your search results. If you’re searching for tweets from a particular Twitter user, you can use these codes to specify which types of results you’d like to receive.

from:wikiHow hello This displays all tweets from the user “wikiHow” that contains the word “hello. " from:wikiHow how to do anything Since there are no quotes around the words, this will search for all tweets from user “wikiHow” that contain all of those words in a single tweet. [1] X Research source You can enter as many words as you want, and even use hashtags. from:wikiHow “how to do anything” Now that you’ve added quotes, this searches for all tweets by the user “wikiHow” containing the exact phrase “how to do anything. " from:wikiHow how -to do anything The minus sign before the word “to” means that this searches for all tweets containing the words “how,” “do,” and “anything” that do not include the word “to. " from:wikiHow :) The smiley face will return all tweets from the user that indicate a positive attitude. Replace the smiley with a sad face :( to see just the tweets that Twitter thinks indicate a negative attitude. For a full list of search operators, visit https://developer. twitter. com/en/docs/twitter-api/v1/rules-and-filtering/search-operators.

Click the Latest tab at the top of the page to view the results in chronological order. The most recent tweet matching your search criteria will appear first in the list.

Click the Latest tab at the top of the page to view the results in chronological order. The most recent tweet matching your search criteria will appear first in the list.