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Official statement

Google recognizes hyphenated words as separate terms. Over time, Google's statistical systems automatically learn to treat certain variants as synonyms, especially for frequently searched terms, but this is not guaranteed for all terms.
35:37
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h01 💬 EN 📅 15/01/2021 ✂ 27 statements
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Other statements from this video 26
  1. 2:11 Comment la position d'un lien dans l'arborescence influence-t-elle vraiment la fréquence de crawl ?
  2. 2:11 Les liens depuis la homepage augmentent-ils vraiment la fréquence de crawl ?
  3. 2:43 Pourquoi Google ignore-t-il vos balises title et meta description ?
  4. 3:13 Pourquoi Google réécrit-il vos titres et meta descriptions malgré vos optimisations ?
  5. 4:47 Faut-il vraiment se soucier du crawl HTTP/2 de Google ?
  6. 4:47 Faut-il vraiment s'inquiéter du passage de Googlebot au crawling HTTP/2 ?
  7. 5:21 HTTP/2 booste-t-il vraiment le crawl budget ou surcharge-t-il simplement vos serveurs ?
  8. 6:21 HTTP/2 améliore-t-il vraiment les Core Web Vitals de votre site ?
  9. 6:27 Le passage à HTTP/2 de Googlebot a-t-il un impact sur vos Core Web Vitals ?
  10. 8:32 L'outil de suppression d'URL empêche-t-il vraiment Google de crawler vos pages ?
  11. 9:02 Pourquoi l'outil de suppression d'URL de Google ne retire-t-il pas vraiment vos pages de l'index ?
  12. 13:13 Faut-il vraiment ajouter nofollow sur chaque lien d'une page noindex ?
  13. 13:38 Les pages en noindex bloquent-elles vraiment la transmission de valeur via leurs liens ?
  14. 16:37 Canonical ou redirection 301 : comment gérer proprement la migration de contenu entre plusieurs sites ?
  15. 26:00 Pourquoi x-default est-il obligatoire sur une homepage avec redirection linguistique ?
  16. 28:34 Faut-il craindre une pénalité SEO en apparaissant dans Google News ?
  17. 31:57 Faut-il vraiment supprimer vos vieux contenus ou les améliorer pour le SEO ?
  18. 32:08 Faut-il vraiment supprimer votre vieux contenu de faible qualité pour améliorer votre SEO ?
  19. 33:22 L'outil de suppression d'URL retire-t-il vraiment vos pages de l'index Google ?
  20. 35:37 Les traits d'union dans les URLs et le contenu nuisent-ils vraiment au référencement ?
  21. 38:48 L'API Natural Language de Google reflète-t-elle vraiment le fonctionnement de la recherche ?
  22. 41:49 Pourquoi Google refuse-t-il d'indexer les images sans page HTML parente ?
  23. 42:56 Faut-il vraiment soumettre les pages HTML dans un sitemap images plutôt que les fichiers JPG ?
  24. 45:08 Le duplicate content technique nuit-il vraiment au référencement de votre site ?
  25. 45:41 Le duplicate content technique pénalise-t-il vraiment votre site ?
  26. 53:02 Faut-il détailler chaque URL dans une demande de réexamen après pénalité manuelle ?
📅
Official statement from (5 years ago)
TL;DR

Google treats hyphenated words as distinct and separate terms. Over time, its systems gradually learn to consider certain variants as synonyms, but only for frequently searched queries — nothing is guaranteed for the rest. Specifically, 'natural referencing' and 'natural-referencing' are not equivalent by default in the algorithm.

What you need to understand

What does 'separate terms' really mean in Google's engine?

When Google claims to treat hyphenated words as separate terms, it means that 'e-commerce' is split into two distinct tokens: 'e' and 'commerce'. The engine does not automatically establish a semantic bridge between 'e-commerce', 'ecommerce', and 'e commerce'.

This distinction has direct consequences on the matching of your pages. If your title optimizes for 'digital safe' but the user searches for 'safe digital' (without hyphen), Google does not guarantee that your page will be considered perfectly relevant. The engine might — or might not — learn synonymy, but that's never a given.

How do statistical systems learn these synonymies?

Google relies on search volumes and user behaviors to detect that two variants refer to the same thing. If millions of people search for 'pre-order', 'precommande', and 'pre commande' and click on the same results, the engine will eventually treat these forms as interchangeable.

The catch? This mechanism only works for frequently searched terms. If you are targeting a B2B niche with 'CRM-software' and the volume is too low, machine learning will never occur. As a result, you have to manually cover all variants in your content, tags, and linking.

Why does this statement change the game for technical SEOs?

For years, many practitioners have assumed that Google 'automatically understood' all common spelling variations. This statement from Mueller resets the clock: the engine does not guess, it learns — and only if the data allow it.

This means your semantic audits now must include a systematic analysis of variants with and without hyphens, especially if you work in technical or niche sectors. Each variant should be treated as a distinct keyword until proven otherwise.

  • Google guarantees no automatic equivalence between words with and without hyphens
  • Statistical learning only pertains to high search volume terms
  • For niches and technical terms, you must manually cover all variants
  • A solid semantic audit must map every spelling variation of a target keyword
  • Google's learned synonymies can evolve over time without prior notice

SEO Expert opinion

Does this statement align with field observations?

Yes, and it's even one of the rare times Google is explicit about such a granular mechanism. A/B tests on nearly identical pages regularly show that changing a hyphen can alter rankings, especially on low-volume queries. Tracking tools like SEMrush or Ahrefs often report distinct rankings for these variants.

What’s surprising is Mueller openly recognizing the limitations of the statistical system. Google implicitly admits it doesn't 'understand' all terms to the same depth — a rare admission from Mountain View. This aligns with what we observe: SERPs for 'co-working' vs 'coworking' don’t always overlap 100%.

What nuances need to be added to this general rule?

Mueller talks about 'frequently searched terms', but provides no threshold. Is it 1,000 monthly searches? 10,000? Impossible to know. [To be verified] — and that's where the ambiguity becomes problematic for a practitioner who must make concrete decisions for a client.

Another point: Google specifies that 'systems learn automatically', which means there’s no way to force this synonymy. You cannot submit a request for 'pre-order' to be recognized as equivalent to 'precommande'. Everything relies on behavioral signals you do not directly control.

Warning: This limitation can create blind spots in your content strategies. If you only bet on the hyphenated variant because it seems 'more correct' to you, you risk losing traffic on the version without a hyphen — and vice versa.

When does this rule not really apply?

For brands and proper names, Google seems more lenient. If you search for 'Coca Cola', 'Coca-Cola' or 'CocaCola', you get the same results — because the Knowledge Graph and the entity 'Coca-Cola' take precedence over raw lexical splitting.

Similarly, for navigational queries ('email login', 'client area'), Google prioritizes intent and click history over exact matching. But as soon as you switch to an informational or transactional long-tail query, splitting becomes critical again.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do concretely with your existing content?

Start with a lexical audit of your strategic pages. Extract all target keywords that contain a hyphen (or could contain one) and check their search volume in Search Console. Compare impressions and clicks for 'keyword' vs 'keyword' — you’ll be surprised by the differences.

Then, naturally enrich your content with missing variants. If your H1 uses 'co-founder', slip 'cofounder' and 'co founder' into the introduction or subtitles. The goal is not to keyword stuff, but to cover all possible entry points without betting on Google's machine learning.

How to adapt your internal linking strategy and anchors?

Diversify your internal link anchors by incorporating all relevant spelling variants. If you promote a page on 'pre-order', some internal links may use 'precommande' or 'pre commande' as exact or partial anchors. This strengthens the semantic coverage of the target page.

Also consider your semantic cocoon: satellite pages should reflect this lexical diversity. If a child page consistently uses the hyphenated version, it may not show up in Google’s suggestions for the version without a hyphen — even if the topic is identical.

Should you modify your Title tags and meta descriptions?

Yes, but with finesse. If your Main Title targets 'e-learning', make sure that the meta description or H2 includes 'elearning' or 'e learning'. Google may display rich snippets that prioritize the exact variant entered by the user, and you want to maximize the click-through rate.

For image Alt tags, apply the same logic: if you have multiple visuals on a page, alternate the variants in the Alt attributes. This contributes to semantic density without cluttering the visible text.

  • Systematically audit all variants with/without hyphens of your target keywords in Search Console
  • Enrich strategic content with all three spelling forms (hyphenated, concatenated, spaced)
  • Diversify internal linking anchors to cover each variant
  • Integrate variants into Titles, meta descriptions, Hn tags, and Alt attributes
  • Create A/B tests on secondary pages to measure the real impact of each variant
  • Monitor ranking evolution to detect if Google learns a synonym over time
Managing spelling variants is not just a matter of grammar: it’s a full-fledged SEO lever. Let’s be honest, these optimizations are time-consuming and require sharp expertise in semantics, crawling, and data analysis. If your team lacks the time or resources to audit and deploy these adjustments at scale, it may be wise to hire a specialized SEO agency that has proven tools and methodologies to handle such issues in an industrial manner.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Google traite-t-il « e-commerce » et « ecommerce » comme des synonymes automatiquement ?
Non, pas automatiquement. Google peut apprendre cette équivalence si le terme est fréquemment recherché et que les comportements utilisateurs montrent qu'il s'agit du même concept, mais ce n'est jamais garanti. Pour les termes de niche ou à faible volume, tu dois couvrir les deux variantes manuellement.
Est-ce que cette règle s'applique aussi aux noms de domaine avec trait d'union ?
Oui, dans une certaine mesure. Un domaine « mon-site.com » et « monsite.com » sont traités comme deux entités distinctes par Google. L'algorithme peut apprendre une association si les deux domaines pointent vers le même contenu ou la même marque, mais ce n'est pas automatique.
Faut-il créer une page distincte pour chaque variante orthographique d'un mot-clé ?
Non, ce serait du duplicate content inutile. L'approche recommandée est de créer une seule page de référence et d'intégrer naturellement toutes les variantes dans le contenu, les balises et le maillage interne.
Les outils SEO classiques détectent-ils ces nuances de trait d'union ?
Rarement. La plupart des outils agrègent les variantes ou ne les distinguent pas clairement. Il faut croiser les données de la Search Console avec des exports bruts pour identifier les écarts réels d'impressions et de clics entre les variantes.
Comment savoir si Google a appris la synonymie entre deux variantes pour mon site ?
Surveille les classements dans la Search Console ou un outil de suivi de positions. Si tu rankais uniquement sur « mot-clé » et que tu commences à apparaître sur « mot clé » sans avoir modifié ton contenu, c'est un indice que Google a établi le lien. Mais cela reste imprévisible et non garanti.
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