Are there any search engines that allow searches of two exact phrases?

This is Google’s advanced search options (the first few ones, at least):

with all of the words
with the exact phrase
with at least one of the words
without the words

It only lets you put one sentence in the exact phrase box. Often, I want to find a page that has two exact phrases in it, ie ‘kids in the hall’ and ‘worst episode ever.’ Putting either phrase in the ‘all of the words’ box doesn’t cut it, believe me! So do any search engines let you search for several exact sentences?

Also, with google, in the ‘without the words’ box, if you put in a bunch of words, which I’ve done before, it starts not caring about a certain number of them after a point and allows them in the search. Is there a search engine w/ more ‘w/o words’ capabilities?

Just using Google’s basic search page, I was able to come up with This by entering “Kids in the Hall” “worst episode ever” just like that. That’s what you wanted, right? Just put each phrase in quotation marks in the main search box.

I’ve managed to Google

“blah-blah-blah” AND “yadda-yadda-yadda” OR “hummina-hummina” NOT “Hey nonny-nonny”

Right. The trick curiously enough is that this can’t be done from the advanced search page. It can only be done as a basic search.

CORRECTION:

I just checked, and it can be done from the advanced search page:

http://www.google.ie/search?as_q=&num=10&hl=en&btnG=Google+Search&as_epq="Kids+in+the+Hall"+"worst+episode+ever"&as_oq=&as_eq=&lr=&as_ft=i&as_filetype=&as_qdr=all&as_occt=any&as_dt=i&as_sitesearch=&safe=off

The trick is entering multiple phrases in quotes in the “exact phrase” box.

As for the max number of words, it used to be ten or so but I think Google increased it to 100 a while back. That should be more than enough words.

Were you just using this an example, or did you know that it will actually return 3 hits?