"Research" topics automatically — 's autocomplete.
(This is the wrong way to use Google for research, FYI.)
npm i suboptimal-research-tool -g
research cats
(pluralization shouldn't matter)
Hey, look, a cat!
I think cats are...
cute
weird
curious
lazy
flexible
evil
stupid
nocturnal
sleepy
funny
What do cats do? They...
purr
meow
sleep
eat grass
hate water
hiss
bite
drool
knead
sneeze
spray
love boxes
pant
chirp
wag tails
There is a curious cat.
There is a lazy cat.
There is a funny, lazy, evil cat.
There is a lazy, evil, cute cat.
There is a funny, weird, flexible cat.
There is a cute, evil, sleepy cat.
A weird cat drooled.
A cute cat bit.
A funny, cute cat hissed.
A funny, stupid, evil cat hated water.
A sleepy cat panted.
A weird cat meowed.
If you have some use for this, here it is!
var research = require("suboptimal-research-tool");
research("bats", function(err, subject){
if(err){
return console.error(err);
}
console.log(
subject.singular, // "bat"
subject.plural, // "bats"
subject.adjectives, // ["scary", etc.]
subject.verbs // ["hibernate", etc.]
);
});
This module asks Google's autocomplete team what people search for in relation to a given subject.
Specifially, it finds what people have asked in the form of Why are <SUBJECTs>...?
(hoping for adjectives) and Why do <SUBJECTs>...?
(hoping for verb phrases).
Because of the way the results are procured, they are prone to include misconceptions, stereotypes and opinions.
For instance, people search for "why are zebras extinct", so this module blindly assumes zebras are extinct.