But in the sample, "A" is replaced with "Letter", "Alphabet", which are nouns, not letters. Hmm. So perhaps the correct approach is to find synonyms for each word, even if the word is a specific term. For example, replacing "Alphabet" with "Language", "Writing", etc., but in the context here, "Letter A" is part of the title. So perhaps the user wants each word to be replaced, even if it's a specific term, with three related words. So for "A", since it's a letter, maybe "Symbol", "Character", "Alphabet" as options.
The sample text shows the first title as "Here are five potential title options for “a”:..." and then the first title modification is That Symbol Letter. Wait, in the sample, "A" is being modified to "Letter", "Character", "Symbol". But maybe "A" is a name here, but in the context of the titles, it's referring to the letter "A". Hmm. The user instruction says "keep names intact", which might refer to keeping the actual names of things like the title options, like "The Letter A" is a title. So maybe "A" is part of the title and should be considered as a word to replace. But how to replace "A"? Alternatively, perhaps "A" refers to the article "a", but in the titles, it's the letter. So the user might have intended to replace each word except the specific names. Wait, this is a bit ambiguous. But looking at the sample response, they do replace "A" with synonyms like "Letter", "Character", "Alphabet". So maybe even the letter "A" is being replaced with related terms. So following that example, I can proceed. shahd fylm Cabaret Desire 2011 mtrjm fasl alany Q shahd
Third title: "The Mysterious A" The: This Mysterious: Mysterious A: Alphabet But in the sample, "A" is replaced with
Similarly, for "A: The Beginning", "A" is the letter, colon is punctuation (maybe keep as is?), but maybe replace "Beginning" with "Start", "Origin", "Startup". The sample text shows the first title as