At least two.
There are two dependent clauses.
In order to be "compound," a sentence must have more than one independent clause. So a sentence with 2 or more independent clauses is a compound sentence.
A compound sentence has at least two independent clauses but no subordinate clauses (which are only in complex or compound-complex sentences).
one to two
one to two
A complex sentence has an independent clause and one or more dependent clauses. A compound sentence has 2 or more independent clauses. A compound-complex sentence has two or more independent clauses and one or more dependent clauses.
A compound sentence contains multiple independent clauses, each of which has its own predicate. Therefore, the number of predicates in a compound sentence is equal to the number of independent clauses it contains. For example, in the sentence "I went to the store, and she stayed home," there are two independent clauses and thus two predicates.
Compound sentence
A compound sentence has 2 or more coordinate independent clauses. A complex sentence is made from a dependent and independent clauses joined together.
compound sentence
A compound sentence. --Sunset Shew --May31,2012
A compound sentence does not consist of dependent clauses; it exclusively features two or more independent clauses that are connected by coordinating conjunctions (like "and," "but," or "or"). Additionally, a compound sentence does not include subordinate clauses, which cannot stand alone as complete sentences. Instead, each clause in a compound sentence can function independently.