-girlsdoporn- 19 Years Old -e399 - 24.12.2016- ~upd~ Online

Given that, I should process each word individually. Use a thesaurus to find three synonyms for each. But how do I know which three to pick? The example uses "text," "sample," "example." All are nouns. Maybe the user wants three different words that can substitute for the original in various contexts. However, "switch every word" might mean substituting each word with a synonym, not all words. The instruction says "switch every word with 3 variants in spintax."

The user might not want me to handle that complexity and just replace all words with three variations unless it's a name they explicitly list. Since the example doesn't include any names, maybe the user wants a straightforward replacement for all words. -GirlsDoPorn- 19 Years Old -E399 - 24.12.2016-

But the user also mentioned "keep names intact," which in this case, "Text" isn't a name. If it were "Text," perhaps in a title, it's a common noun. So proceeding with replacing it. Therefore, the final output would be text:. Given that, I should process each word individually

Wait, in the example, the input was "Text:" and the output was "text:". But the input was just "Text:", so the word "Text" is actually a proper noun. Maybe the user intended "text" as a common noun. This is a bit confusing. Also, the user mentioned to keep names intact, so if "Text" was a name, like a person's name, it shouldn't be changed. But in the example, it was changed. That might indicate that the user wants the processing to ignore names but in the example, they didn't have a name to keep. The example uses "text," "sample," "example

Wait, perhaps the user's example shows replacing the word "Text" with three variations. So if the input is "Hello Text," the output would be "Hello sample:" but with the proper syntax. Also, "Text:" becomes "text:" but in some cases, maybe it's just the word "Text" as part of a sentence.