Next part: "One of the most adored stories of all time, Snow White, is no exception. As we enter 2024, a new generation of observers is eager to experience the ageless tale in a novel and intriguing way."
Proper nouns typically include names of specific people, places, organizations, titles of works, etc. Here, "Snow White" is a fairy tale and a specific character, so that's a proper noun. "2024" is the year, but in the context of "The 2024 Snow White adaptation", the entire phrase might be considered a title, but "2024" is just the year. However, "2024" alone isn't a proper noun unless in some specific context. In this case, since it's part of the title of the adaptation, maybe "2024" is part of the proper noun. The user might want to leave that as is. Alternatively, the user might consider "Snow White" as a proper noun but not "2024". Hmm. Since the user's instruction is to leave proper nouns, which are proper nouns like "Snow White", but maybe "2024" isn't a proper noun. However, in the context of "2024 Snow White adaptation", the year is part of the title. But in spintax, numbers can be tricky. The user might not want to spin the year. Wait, but the user says "convert all words with 3 alternatives as spintax". The instruction is to convert all words except proper nouns. Therefore, the user wants each word not a proper noun to be replaced with spintax. So I need to identify which words are proper nouns in the text and leave them, then convert others. snow white -2024-
But wait, the user mentioned to keep names intact. The name "Snow White" and "Brothers Grimm" should remain unchanged. Similarly, "queen" is part of the story, so spintax options like "queen|monarch|sovereign" are okay as they are variants of the title, not the actual name. Also, "dwarfs" vs. "dwarves" is a common variation, so that's acceptable. Next part: "One of the most adored stories