it counts as one
Samantha broke two of the five brackets on her teeth.
In the sentnece, "You have an orange.", the count noun is orange. In this sentence, it is just one orange (indicated by the article 'an'), but it could be two oranges, or many oranges.
no brackets just two bolts, one of which passes through transaxle and bolts into starter
As with a comma, a semi-colon (;) separates items (i.e., a list or set of ideas, etc.) within a given sentence. Therefore, it is one sentence.
one
One, two, three...
The noun coat is a count noun: one coat, two coats.
Use the same rules inside brackets as you would outside of brackets. There is no difference between the two.
Coat is a count noun: one coat, two coats, three coats.
To expand three brackets, expand and simplify two of the brackets then multiply the resulting expression by the third bracket. (FAIZAN BHAI GHAZI)CHANNEL
Yes, a compound sentence does have one subject but two verbs.
No, it counts as one egg.