Sorry, those "semi" things aren't anything formal to do with NMR spectroscopy - that is just my description of what I see when I look at the spectrum. Formally, if you have a 1,2,4 substituted benzene ring, then there would be protons on positions 3,5, and 6. The proton in the 3 position will be split by cross-ring coupling to both 5 and 6, but the couplings are so small that it usually just looks like a slightly broadened singlet, what I've called a "semi-singlet" and is the middle peak in the three peaks of the aromatic region you show in your first spectrum. The proton in the 6 position is coupled strongly by normal 3-bond coupling to the proton in the 5 position (which is ortho to it), which gives a doublet, and very weakly by cross-ring coupling to the 3 proton (para), so it still looks mostly like a doublet - what I've called a "semi-doublet" and which is the right peak set on your spectrum. The proton in the 5 position is coupled strongly to the proton in the 6 position (ortho_ to give a doubly, and weakly to the proton in the 3 position (meta), but somewhat more strongly to 3 than 6 is. That makes it look sort of like a doublet of doublets, usually with some fine structure, and shows the shape on the left peak set on your spectrum. If you expand the aromatic region in a high-field NMR you can see much more detail, but I thought these rough descriptions would suffice for the problem at hand.
I got the term "2 proton" from your nomenclature. If you have 3,4-dichloroacetophenone, then you will have protons attached to your benzene ring at positions 2, 5, and 6. Position 1 has your ketone, and positions 3 and 4 have your chlorines. The 2 proton would be the isolated one between the ketone and the chlorines.