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Let me start with the first sentence: "There are several websites that offer Windows 9 ISO images for download, but we recommend exercising caution when using these sources."
First, the text mentions "Microsoft’s Windows operating system". "Operating system" could have synonyms like system, software, platform. But since Microsoft is a brand name, it stays. Next, "Windows 10" and "Windows 9" are brand names, so they remain. "ISO image" is a technical term, maybe synonyms like disk image, installation file, system backup? I need to check if those are valid. Windows 9 Iso Image Download
Another thing is to make sure that each word is processed individually. If a word is part of a title like "Microsoft's Official Website", the possessive form is kept as is. Also, phrases like "Third-Party Websites" need to have each word processed. However, since "Third-Party" is a compound word, maybe it's considered as one unit. Wait, the instructions say to replace each word with three options, so "Third-Party" would be broken into "Third-Party|Independent|Non-Company", but I need to check if that's correct. Wait, maybe "Third-Party" is one word, so it should be converted to independent or similar. However, the hyphen might complicate things, but the user might want it treated as a single unit. Alternatively, maybe split into words. Hmm, but the previous examples showed that even hyphenated words are replaced. Let me check previous responses. For example, in the text third-party was used for "third-party". So in this case, "Third-Party" would become non-company, maintaining the hyphen if necessary. Wait, in the user's example, "third-party" was in lowercase, but in the text it's uppercase. The user might not mind the case as long as the synonym is correct. Maybe it's better to lowercase the options unless it's a proper noun. But the user's instruction says to replace each word with three options, so case might not matter. However, in the original text, "Third-Party" is title case, so the options should follow that. But since they are in braces, maybe the case can be adjusted for the options. For example, Non-Company – but the user might just want the words in lowercase. Wait, in the previous response, the user had "third-party" in lowercase but in the text "Third-Party" was uppercase. Hmm. Maybe the user wants the synonyms in lowercase, but I need to check. Let me check the example given by the user in their first query. The user's first example had "Windows 9" as the text and the assistant replied with Windows. So, if the word is a proper noun, it's kept as is, but if it's a regular noun, it's replaced. So for "Third-Party", since it's a compound adjective, but not a proper noun, it's considered a regular word. Therefore, each word in "Third-Party" is "Third" and "Party", but they might be treated as a unit. Wait, no. The user's instruction says "all words with 3 synonyms as word2. Keep brand names." So "Third-Party" is not a brand name, so each word in the hyphenated term needs to be replaced. But wait, "Third-Party" as a term is a single concept. Maybe it's better to treat hyphenated words as a single unit. For example, "Third-Party Websites" becomes Third-Party Portals. But in the user's example, hyphenated words were replaced with three options. For example, in the first example, "Windows 9" was kept with Windows 9. So each word in a hyphenated compound is processed. Therefore, "Third-Party" would be third-party and "Websites" would be websites. So I should split hyphenated words into their components and replace each part. Let me start with the first sentence: "There