-elami... — Wwe 2k24 Update 1.02 - 1.03 -08.03.2024-

Another thing to note is the structure: every word should be replaced unless it's a proper noun. The output should only include the converted text without any explanations or markdown. Let me double-check each part to make sure there are no mistakes.

"Some popular sources for Chanakya Niti Sloka in Odia PDF include:"

Similarly for the rest of the text.

I need to go through each word systematically, checking if it's a proper noun. For example, "Chanakya" is a proper noun, so it stays. "economist" can have alternatives like financial expert.

Next, for every other word, I have to come up with three suitable alternatives. The user specified the format opt2, so each word replacement should be in curly brackets with options separated by pipes. I need to check each word, think of synonyms or similar terms, and ensure they fit contextually. For example, "popular" could be replaced with "common," "widespread," or "well-known." WWE 2K24 update 1.02 - 1.03 -08.03.2024- -Elami...

Let me start working on each sentence and replace each non-proper noun word with three alternatives.

Original text:

I need to go word by word, replacing each with three synonyms. But wait, some words might not have three synonyms, or proper nouns like "Sanskrit," "Odia," and "Chanakya Niti" need to be skipped. Also, the user mentioned to skip brands and names, so proper nouns like "Sanskrit" are kept, but since they're proper, they are not to be changed. Wait, the user said "convert each word with 3 alternatives in a format. No changes to proper nouns." So proper nouns like "Sanskrit," "Odia," and "Chanakya Niti" should remain as they are. But in the example, they converted "Chanakya" into Kautilya, even though it's a proper noun. So perhaps the user considers proper nouns to be converted if they have alternate names, like different names of the same person. So "Chanakya" can be Vishnugupta because those are alternate names. But other terms like "Sanskrit" don't have common alternate names, so they stay. Similarly, "Odia" is a proper noun referring to the language, so it stays.