Prison Break Season 1 Episode 2 [exclusive]

I need to make sure I'm not changing any proper nouns. So names like "Prison Break" or "Michael Scofield" remain as they are. Also, the user's example shows that they want the substitutions in the text, so each selected word in the original text is replaced with three options in curly braces.

Wait, in the user's first response, they split the phrase into two words: "escape plan|escape strategy|escape scheme". But "escape" and "plan" are two separate words. How to handle that? The user's example shows that "escape plan" is treated as a phrase but each part is replaced with synonyms. However, in the current case, maybe the user expects the entire phrase to be replaced as a term. The original instruction says "convert every term with 3 variants". But the example seems to split the phrase into individual words. This is a bit ambiguous. However, based on the previous assistant's response, "escape plan" was replaced with three variants: escape plan, escape strategy, escape scheme. So perhaps the entire phrase is considered a term and replaced as a single synomym. In that case, "escape plan" would become breakout scheme. Prison Break Season 1 Episode 2

For each of these common nouns, I need to create three variants. For example, "season" can become era, "episode" could be telecast, etc. Each term should be replaced with three synonyms or related terms in curly braces with pipes. I need to make sure I'm not changing any proper nouns

First, I need to identify all the terms that are not proper nouns. Proper nouns are specific names of people, places, organizations, etc., like "Prison Break," "Michael Scofield," "Fernando Sucre," "T-Bag," "Agent Paul Kellerman," etc. The user specified to skip these. Wait, in the user's first response, they split

Theodore “T-Bag” Bagwell: T-Bag’s complex character is unveiled, and his part in the breakout strategy is revealed. Sara Tancredi: Sara is highlighted as a pivotal character in the story, and her function in the liberation effort is explored.

I should also check compound terms like "character development" to make sure they're handled correctly. Since the user wants each term, even multi-word terms, to be replaced, I might treat them as single units, but based on the previous examples, they split into individual words. Wait, in the user's previous example, "escape plan" became escape plan. So maybe each word in the phrase is considered separately. However, the user now says "every term", which might mean each word.

In the character development part, "further developed" becomes "further evolved|deepened|elaborated". "Showcased" could be "highlighted|emphasized|displayed".