Tranny Self Facial -
Wait, the user says to "Skip proper nouns." So if "Tranny" is a proper noun (like a name or a specific term), we should skip it. However, in the example, "tranny self facials" was converted into spintax. Maybe the user is not concerned about that and wants the entire phrase replaced, even if part of it is a proper noun. Or perhaps the user is using "tranny" as an example term here, but actually meant to convert the entire phrase without worrying about proper nouns within it. The instructions are a bit ambiguous here, but the example output shows that the term "tranny self facials" is converted, so I should follow that.
Hmm, I need to make sure I understand the task correctly. The user is asking for synonyms or alternative phrases for each term in the text. But wait, they mentioned using a format. So for each term, I need to provide three different versions. However, the user also specified not to touch proper nouns. "Tranny Self Facials" seems like a proper noun here, so I shouldn't rephrase that part. tranny self facial
Softly manipulate one's visage leveraging ascending combined with external passes, targeting on regions like the brow area, cheek regions, and chin edge. Wait, the user says to "Skip proper nouns
So for each word in the input text, replace it with three synonyms in curly braces. However, multi-word terms like "facial steamer" would each word be replaced, or the whole phrase? Based on the example in the user's problem, "Use a facial steamer" becomes "Utilize|Apply|Employ a facial steamer", which suggests that each individual word is replaced. Wait, in the example provided in the user's question, the first line is: Or perhaps the user is using "tranny" as
First, I need to parse the text. Let's go through each sentence. For example, the first line is "Use a facial steamer to open up your pores and loosen impurities." The word "Use" can be replaced with "Utilize|Apply|Employ". "Facial steamer" should be "facial steamer|steam device|face vaporizer". Wait, but "facial steamer" is a noun phrase. Do I need to replace each word in the phrase or keep the phrase as a whole? The user might want each word in the text replaced, so maybe break down each word. But phrases like "facial steamer" are two words. Maybe the task is to consider each word individually. Let me check the sample input and output. The user provided an example where each word is replaced with three synonyms. So even multi-word terms are treated as single units. Wait, no, in the example, "Use a facial steamer..." becomes "Utilize|Apply|Employ a steam device|face vaporizer|dermal fumigator towidenyour pores anddetachimpurities." So each word is handled individually. So even "facial steamer" is split into "facial steamer" being replaced, but maybe each component word is considered. Wait, perhaps the entire phrase is considered as a whole? Hmm. The user says "update all words with 3 synonyms", so each individual word in the original text should be replaced with three synonyms. So "Use a facial steamer" would be Utilize a facial fumigator? Wait, but the phrase is "facial steamer" which is two words. So maybe the entire phrase is considered one unit? The user's example shows that "facial steamer" becomes "steam device|face vaporizer|dermal fumigator", which suggests that the two-word phrase is being replaced as a single unit with three synonyms. Interesting. So the instruction is to take each word (or phrase) in the original and replace it with three synonyms, but phrases like "facial steamer" are replaced with three different phrases. So the key is to look at each noun phrase or verb phrase and find three synonyms for them. But that's a bit tricky, but maybe manageable.
I need to watch out for technical terms related to skincare and mindfulness to use appropriate equivalents. Words like 'inflammation' might become 'irritation|skin redness|dermatological swelling'. For phrases like 'promote healthy skin cell growth', alternatives could be 'stimulate skin renewal|encourage cell regeneration|aid in epidermal development'.