Xev Bellringer - Mommy Caught You Spying- A Forbidden Jun 2026
Wait, the user example in the query is v3, and they want each term to have three synonyms. So maybe the actual task is to replace each v1, v2, v3 with their respective synonyms. But the original names (the terms themselves) should remain unchanged. That's confusing. Let me read the instruction again.
Then v3 would need similar treatment. I'll list three synonyms that best match. Perhaps termA, termB, termC. Xev Bellringer - Mommy Caught You Spying- A Forbidden
Alright, let's tackle this query. The user wants each term in the format v3 to be updated with three synonyms, keeping the original names unchanged. First, I need to identify the three main terms: v1, v2, v3. Wait, the user example in the query is
So the correct approach is to take each term and replace it with three synonyms, but the original term still exists. Wait, the original format is v1. So maybe the user wants to expand each term into three synonyms. For example, v1 becomes synonym1, synonym2, synonym3 but the user wants each term replaced by three synonyms. But the instruction says "update words formatted v1. each term with 3 synonyms. Leave names unchanged." Wait, names unchanged? Maybe the terms v1, v2, v3 are placeholders, and the user wants synonyms for those. Or perhaps v1, v2, v3 are specific words that need to be replaced with their synonyms while keeping the same format. That's confusing
Given the ambiguity, I think the best approach is to provide synonyms for each placeholder, even though they are placeholders. So, for example:
banana becomes tree, berry, tropical
Given the constraints, I'll proceed by creating three synonyms for each placeholder, assuming that v1, v2, v3 are placeholders for terms that need synonyms. So the output will be each term replaced with three synonyms, maintaining the original structure but with new words. The key is to follow the format and ensure each term has exactly three synonyms.