Morph search help: articular noun, broad

What is the search term if I am looking for all articular occurrences of a noun, say λόγος, so that occurrences of article + λόγος (e.g. τοὺς λόγους) as well as article + one or more adjectives + λόγος (e.g. τοῖς ἡμετέροις λόγοις) are captured?
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Not a Morph Search, but does this give you what you seek? Note that λόγος with the article is quite frequent in the New Testament.
My first attempt did not catch the occurrences with intervening words.
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Lee said:
article + λόγος
Try @D BEFORE 1 WORD lemma:λόγος in NA27/NA28/LGNTI (resources with Greek Logos Morphology)
Lee said:article + one or more adjectives + λόγος
@D BEFORE 1 WORD @J BEFORE 1 WORD lemma:λόγος
EDIT:
There isn't a result for "more adjectives" than one, but tryDave
===Windows 11 & Android 13
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Lee said:
λόγος is just hypothetical.
With either search, changing the target word will be easy.
Also note that, in the Syntax Search, the first hit is a false positive. But in scrolling about half-way through the list, I did not see any other false positives.
This search—with a different Syntax database—may yield better results. This yields the same results as combining Dave's Morph searches
[quote](@D BEFORE 1 WORD lemma:λόγος) OR (@D BEFORE 1-2 WORD @J BEFORE 1 WORD lemma:λόγος)
Noted that search results with the Lexham syntactical databases are unreliable due to apparently inconsistent tagging. Sometime phrases are tagged as phrases; other times they are tagged as segments.
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Thanks, Jack. That looks powerful.
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Lee said:
Thanks, Jack. That looks powerful.
You are welcome. I am still learning how to do syntactical searches. John Fallahee's video was a good start, but it only scratches the surface of the tool. I finished with Cascadia over OpenText because Phrase (Cascadia) gives more precision than Clause Segment (OpenText). Agreement with the results of Dave's construction confirmed this. Overall Lexham was a tremendous disappointment.
Thank you for providing a concrete problem to solve.
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Nominal λόγος phrase with Article:
includes all results from Morph Search:
@D BEFORE 1-2 WORD @J BEFORE 1 WORD lemma:λόγος
Another search to ponder is:
Nominal λόγος phrase with Article OR Prepositional λόγος phrase
Some prepositions can function as an adjective with nouns. Also prepositional usage can have a definitive character.
Keep Smiling [:)]
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