13.2.2 Examples of Queries that Cannot Have Fully Meets Results There are some queries that cannot have a Fully Meets result. Here are some examples.
Type of Query
Example
No Fully Meets Result: Explanation
This is a broad informational query. Knitting is an activity anyone can do and that anyone can create a website for. Different users may want different types of content: videos, instructions, patterns, etc. There is no one official source for knitting information and no one result could satisfy most users. Therefore, no Fully Meets result is possible for this query. This is a broad informational query and it is impossible to know exactly what the user is looking for. There is no dominant interpretation for this query. The following entities are all common interpretations: Americans with Disabilities Act, American Dental Association, and American Diabetes Association. While each interpretation has an official homepage, none is Fully Meets since there is no dominant interpretation. Queries for people’s names can be tricky. Many or most people queries do not have a dominant interpretation. Even unusual sounding name queries may not have a dominant interpretation. For example, the queries [sam wen], [tran nguyen], and [david mease] can have no Fully Meets result because there are multiple people with each of these names, and it is not clear that most users are looking for any one particular individual.
[knitting]
Broad queries where no single result could fully satisfy all users
Famous names
e.g., [barack obama]
[ada]
Ambiguous queries without a clear user intent or dominant interpretation
Non-famous people names
e.g., [sam wen]
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