Bsm English Test Verified
- The → This - BSM English Test → kept - has → contains - several → multiple - features → aspects - that → what - make → allow - it → these or maybe the test but "this assessment" is a phrase. Wait, user says "modify each word with 3 alternatives". So each word individually. So "it" is a pronoun; possible synonyms for "it" in this context could be "the test", but since it refers to the test, maybe better to use the or this. But "this" would refer to the same test. Maybe the assessment but as single words. Alternatively, use synonyms for "it" like "the tool" but "tool" is part of the previous term. Hmm, tricky. Maybe the since they are articles but used as pronouns here.
So the process is: for each word in the text: bsm english test
Breakdown:
In the user's example, they have the sentence "In today’s globalized world, English has become the lingua franca," and in their output, "English" was rephrased as "English|English|English" which doesn't make sense. Hmm, perhaps they made a mistake in their example. Wait, looking back: - The → This - BSM English Test
Now, I need to go through the entire text, word by word, and apply these steps. Let's start with the first sentence. So "it" is a pronoun; possible synonyms for
This complicates things. To proceed, I'll assume that "English" in the proper noun "BSM English Test" is part of the proper noun and thus stays. Elsewhere, when "English" is used generically, I should replace it with synonyms like "Anglo|Anglic|British" but these synonyms might not be precise. Alternatively, "English" as a language could be replaced with "the English language|English language|English" — but that's not synonyms. Alternatively, "English" could be replaced with "Language|Tongue|Linguistic system," but that might not be accurate. Hmm. This is tricky. Perhaps the best approach is to treat "English" as a proper noun in this context and leave it, but the user's example shows that they did not replace "English" in the first sentence. Wait, in the first sentence, the proper noun is "BSM English Test," so "English" is part of that proper noun. Therefore, in other parts of the text, "English" is not part of a proper noun and should be rephrased. Let's see: In the user's example, "English has become the lingua franca," they might have considered "English" as a language name (not a proper noun) and replaced it with synonyms like "the English language|the English tongue|the English idiom," but that's not a 3-synonym list. Alternatively, the correct approach is to leave "English" as part of proper nouns and replace it otherwise. For example, in "the language is essential," the language could be "English," but in another context, maybe not. This seems inconsistent. Given the user's example, they left "English" in the proper noun but rephrased other words. Therefore, I will follow the same approach: leave proper nouns as is, rephrase all other words with three synonyms.