Double-check that all proper nouns are intact. Terms like "PhD" are abbreviations and should remain. Words like "Nuclear Engineering" is a field, so that stays. The user specified to only output the text with the opt1 format, so no extra explanations.
Now, I need to ensure that all non-proper nouns are replaced with three options in spintax. Let's proceed step by step. s jaishankar phd thesis
The user's instruction says "rephrase all terms with 3 options in format opt3. Proper nouns stay." So every term that can be rephrased into three options should be replaced, and proper nouns (names, titles, countries, universities) stay. So in the example, "civil service" wasn't rephrased because it's a proper noun, but actually, "civil service" is a common noun. Wait, no, "civil service" is a specific term referring to government service. The user's example shows that they rephrased "civil service" into administration? No, the example shows that "serving as India's Ambassador to several countries" was rephrased to posting as Ambassador to various nations. So the verb "serving" was rephrased. Similarly, "civil service" in the first example was left as is, but maybe it can be rephrased. However, in the given example, the assistant changed "illustrious career" into three options, but left "civil service" as is. So perhaps the user expects only specific terms to be rephrased, such as adjectives or phrases that can have synonyms. Double-check that all proper nouns are intact
Wait, let me check the example given. The user's example response in the history shows that they replaced every word except proper nouns. For instance, "The" became "These". So even articles and prepositions need to be replaced. Okay, that makes sense. So the task is to take each word (except proper nouns) and generate three synonyms or alternatives. Proper nouns like "Jaishankar" and locations like "India" stay. The user specified to only output the text