For the interested:
The peak multiplicity thing can be kinda 'simplified' with n+1 rule. To understand this, first recognise that under 'normal' conditions for n+1 splitting, the chemical shift between split'd peaks are the same. Let's call this constant J.
For
Br-CH2C
H2CH2-OD
[D stand for Deuterium, heavy hydrogen, which cannot respond to 1H NMR because it has a proton and a neutron]
The bolded hydrogen would have coupling effects with H in the Br-CH2- and the -CH2-OD. The couping constants J
ab and J
bc are similar (but slightly different), and you get something like this:

as you can see, that sorts itself into n+1 = 5 'groups' of peaks, even though the multiplicity is 9. The peaks kinda merge into each other and are kinda hard to distinguish.
So at the end of the day, the advice is to
FORGET SCIENTIFIC TRUTH AND STICK TO VCE LANDsauce:
http://www.chem.uic.edu/web1/ocol/spec/NMR3.htm