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But how do I determine if a word is a proper noun in the input text? For example, in the sentence "Apple is great...", "Apple" is a proper noun. Similarly, "iPhone", "iPad" are proper nouns. But "your" is not.
In the example, "for" becomes at, "creating" becomes developing, "apps" becomes software, "it" becomes this, "easily" becomes easily, "iPhone" is a proper noun so stays, "iPad" stays. Wait, the example includes "or" as and? No, in the example input, the input sentence is "iPad." and the output has "or device." Wait, maybe the original input had "iPad." as separate? Let me check the example again. OnlyFans 24 04 07 Sadie Summers And Dredd Anal ...
1. Check if the word is a proper noun (capitalized at the start of the sentence, or known proper noun). 2. If it's a proper noun, keep the original as the first option and add two variations. 3. If it's not a proper noun, replace it with three variations (regardless of case). But how do I determine if a word
So, putting this into practice, when processing each word: But "your" is not
But in the example input, the user's example output includes "iPad" as a proper noun with iPad as spintax. So the user is allowing proper nouns to be included in the spintax but include the original term. So perhaps the instruction is to consider the original term even if it's a proper noun and add two more possibilities. Therefore, the user is not strict about not changing proper nouns but wants three options for each term, with the original term included if it is a proper noun.
But how do I generate three appropriate variants for each word? Since I can't generate synonyms on the fly, maybe the user expects us to follow the example they provided, which is replacing words with three plausible variants. So maybe for each non-proper noun word, we can think of three synonyms or paraphrased words.
Wait, the user says "No changes to proper nouns." Proper nouns are names, places, specific titles. So I have to leave those as they are. But how do I identify them? Maybe from the example they provided: they had "Apple" as a proper noun. So in the input text, if there's "Apple is great for creating apps. You can use it easily on your iPhone or iPad.", then "Apple", "iPhone", "iPad" are proper nouns.