Not only does Google know synonyms, as well as foreign terms, dialect, and mis-spellings--it seems that Google has a method for automatically learning new synonyms as they develop through new slang and neologisms. (See: http://www.thesempost.com/google-search-learns-new-synonyms-time/ )
So it is very good to use different synonyms, as much as can be managed within natural language. it avoids the appearance of keyword stuffing, broadens the search you can capture, and does not risk diluting the focus of your content from an SEO point of view.Not only does Google know synonyms, as well as foreign terms, dialect, and mis-spellings--it seems that Google has a method for automatically learning new synonyms as they develop through new slang and neologisms. (See: http://www.thesempost.com/google-search-learns-new-synonyms-time/ )
So it is very good to use different synonyms, as much as can be managed within natural language. it avoids the appearance of keyword stuffing, broadens the search you can capture, and does not risk diluting the focus of your content from an SEO point of view.
Russet
So it is very good to use different synonyms, as much as can be managed within natural language. it avoids the appearance of keyword stuffing, broadens the search you can capture, and does not risk diluting the focus of your content from an SEO point of view. Not only does Google know synonyms, as well as foreign terms, dialect, and mis-spellings--it seems that Google has a method for automatically learning new synonyms as they develop through new slang and neologisms. (See: http://www.thesempost.com/google-search-learns-new-synonyms-time/ ) So it is very good to use different synonyms, as much as can be managed within natural language. it avoids the appearance of keyword stuffing, broadens the search you can capture, and does not risk diluting the focus of your content from an SEO point of view.
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