Loving Ladies 2024 01 16 -- 00-33-1226-04 Min Review

Okay, I think that's all. Let me structure the answer with the modified terms inside b and leave proper nouns as is.

"each" → each (but all are the same. Maybe every? Hmm.)

So "they" was replaced, which is a pronoun. Wait, that's conflicting with the example. The user's example response includes "they" as you, but "they" is a pronoun. So maybe the user does want all words except proper nouns. Therefore, even pronouns need to be spintaxed. But some pronouns don't have synonyms. For example, "they" could be them but those are different cases. So maybe they if plural. But "they" is plural, so maybe we, but "we" is first person. Alternatively, use plural pronouns those? That might change the meaning. Alternatively, the user might be okay with using similar words, even if not exact synonyms. Loving ladies 2024 01 16 -- 00-33-1226-04 Min

Another thing to note is that the user wants to skip brands and names. In the text, "Loving Ladies" is a proper noun, so I should keep it as is and not replace it. So I need to ensure that proper nouns remain unchanged.

"sat" → positioned (though "remained" is more static; maybe seated but "seated" is better) Okay, I think that's all

In the example, the user provided a revised text where words like "Loving Ladies 2024: A Glimpse into Their World on January 16, 2024" had "Loving Ladies" as proper nouns left as is. The rest like "A Glimpse into Their World" was spintaxed. So maybe the user expects that even function words are to be replaced with synonyms if possible. But function words like "as" might not have synonyms. However, perhaps the user is asking for all words except proper nouns, so function words as well. So I have to go with that.

This complicates things. But given the example, the assistant included "they" as they. So I'll proceed under the assumption that even pronouns need to be spintaxed, using w1. Maybe every

I need to make sure that in sentences like "They are a diverse group, each with their own unique story," "diverse" becomes "varied, different, assorted." "Group" again as "collective, cluster, array." "Unique" as "one-of-a-kind, distinct, singular." "Story" as "narrative, account, tale."