Tushy.22.02.27.scarlett.jones.xxx.1080p.hevc.x2... Verified Jun 2026

Alternatively, the user might just mean that proper nouns (like city names) should remain in their original position. For example, if the group has a proper noun like London, then those should stay, and if there are

But the user hasn't provided any example text. They might have provided some in the original problem, but in this case, the user's input is empty. Wait, looking back, the user's text was empty except for the instructions. So maybe they expect me to create my own example text where I can apply this transformation.

Third group Banana: Apple, Banana, Cherry are all proper? Well, Apple is a company, Banana is common, Cherry is a fruit. Wait, depends on context. Maybe the user expects that any capitalized word is considered a proper noun. In this case, Apple is capitalized, so is considered proper. Banana and Cherry are capitalized here but probably not proper nouns. Wait, no. If the original is Apple, assuming that in the input, the user intended these as proper or not. For the sake of this example, maybe the user considers only names like cities or people as proper. But without context, it's hard to tell. But following the instruction, perhaps we just check capitalization. So any option that starts with a capital letter is considered a proper noun. So in the third group Banana, Apple is proper, Banana is not (assuming it's lowercase, but in this example it's written as Banana. Hmm. Wait, the original example is written as Banana, with Banana and Cherry capitalized. That's confusing because usually, Banana and Cherry are lowercase, but maybe in this example, they're capitalized. Maybe the user intended them as common nouns but capitalized for visibility. So in this case, if all three options are capitalized, but none are proper nouns (like names), then they should be rotated. But according to the user's instruction, proper nouns stay, so maybe if a term is a proper noun, it's not changed. But how to detect that without prior knowledge? Tushy.22.02.27.Scarlett.Jones.XXX.1080p.HEVC.x2...

The lazy fox jumped over the dog. Bob went to New York.

Alternatively, maybe the user is providing some text that was supposed to be here but it's missing. Hmm. Let me try to proceed. Alternatively, the user might just mean that proper

Alternatively, if the user wants to randomly swap the options, but since it's a deterministic process, I need to choose a specific permutation pattern. Since the user hasn't specified, maybe just rotating left once each time.

a. Check each option to see if it's a proper noun (maybe by checking if it's capitalized). Wait, looking back, the user's text was empty

First, I need to identify which parts of the text have three options in curly braces. For example, something like cherry. Each of these should be replaced with a different permutation. So instead of just swapping a and b, I need to cycle through all options. Wait, the instruction says "swap all terms with 3 options," which might mean rearranging them or changing them in some way. But the example given is b, so maybe they just want the options to be reordered. But how?

Alternatively, the user might just mean that proper nouns (like city names) should remain in their original position. For example, if the group has a proper noun like London, then those should stay, and if there are

But the user hasn't provided any example text. They might have provided some in the original problem, but in this case, the user's input is empty. Wait, looking back, the user's text was empty except for the instructions. So maybe they expect me to create my own example text where I can apply this transformation.

Third group Banana: Apple, Banana, Cherry are all proper? Well, Apple is a company, Banana is common, Cherry is a fruit. Wait, depends on context. Maybe the user expects that any capitalized word is considered a proper noun. In this case, Apple is capitalized, so is considered proper. Banana and Cherry are capitalized here but probably not proper nouns. Wait, no. If the original is Apple, assuming that in the input, the user intended these as proper or not. For the sake of this example, maybe the user considers only names like cities or people as proper. But without context, it's hard to tell. But following the instruction, perhaps we just check capitalization. So any option that starts with a capital letter is considered a proper noun. So in the third group Banana, Apple is proper, Banana is not (assuming it's lowercase, but in this example it's written as Banana. Hmm. Wait, the original example is written as Banana, with Banana and Cherry capitalized. That's confusing because usually, Banana and Cherry are lowercase, but maybe in this example, they're capitalized. Maybe the user intended them as common nouns but capitalized for visibility. So in this case, if all three options are capitalized, but none are proper nouns (like names), then they should be rotated. But according to the user's instruction, proper nouns stay, so maybe if a term is a proper noun, it's not changed. But how to detect that without prior knowledge?

The lazy fox jumped over the dog. Bob went to New York.

Alternatively, maybe the user is providing some text that was supposed to be here but it's missing. Hmm. Let me try to proceed.

Alternatively, if the user wants to randomly swap the options, but since it's a deterministic process, I need to choose a specific permutation pattern. Since the user hasn't specified, maybe just rotating left once each time.

a. Check each option to see if it's a proper noun (maybe by checking if it's capitalized).

First, I need to identify which parts of the text have three options in curly braces. For example, something like cherry. Each of these should be replaced with a different permutation. So instead of just swapping a and b, I need to cycle through all options. Wait, the instruction says "swap all terms with 3 options," which might mean rearranging them or changing them in some way. But the example given is b, so maybe they just want the options to be reordered. But how?