Me Llamo Earl 1-- Temporada 01 Al 12 !!better!! -
Under "Follow the installation prompts," alternatives for "follow" might be "complete," "execute," or "carry out."
Wait, "Bootable" might be tricky. Maybe replace "Bootable" with "Launchable" or "Startup". But "bootable" is technical, so perhaps leave it as is unless a synonym exists. Since the user says to leave names unchanged, maybe "Bootable Installer" is a term, so I need to check if "bootable" is a word here. The user wants words, not phrases. So maybe "Create a bootable installer": "Create Develop a Bootable Installer". Me Llamo Earl 1-- Temporada 01 al 12
But how do I determine which are proper nouns? In the example, macOS Sonoma and ISO were kept as is. So proper nouns are capitalized words, but not all capitalized words are proper. For example, maybe "Be" is the start of a sentence, so it's capitalized but not a proper noun. Hmm, but the user's example response included all words except the proper nouns. So maybe the task is to replace every word except the proper nouns, regardless of capitalization. Since the user says to leave names unchanged,
"Creating a Bootable Installer from the ISO File": Words here are "create", "bootable", "installer", "ISO file". "Create" can be "develop", "make", "build". "Bootable" might be "launchable", "operational", but contextually "bootable" is specific. Maybe not needed. Hmm. But how do I determine which are proper nouns

