Puremature.13.11.30.janet.mason.keeping.score.x... Best Free

First sentence: "I can create a sample article for you."

So "Industry Insights" is a section heading, not in quotes, so it's just a regular section title. Therefore, since the user wants all words except proper nouns replaced, "Industry Insights" should be modified. But "Industry" is a regular word here. So "Industry" becomes "Business|Sector|Industry", and "Insights" becomes "Analysis|Observations|Perspectives". So Industry Perspectives.

Another point: contractions. For example, "I'm" in "I’ll" should be modified? The original text uses entities like I’ll, which is correct. When replacing "I" in the contraction, perhaps keep the contraction structure. For example, "I'll" could be "We'll|Me'll|They'll," but "Me'll" is incorrect. So maybe just replace "I" with "We|They|You," so it becomes "We'll|They'll|You'll." That might be acceptable. PureMature.13.11.30.Janet.Mason.Keeping.Score.X... BEST

- "charisma" → "presence|magnetism|appeal"

- "In" → "Within|Within|In"

Wait, the user said to replace all words except proper nouns. "Industry Insights" is the title of a section. Are titles considered proper nouns? The user specified "Keep names intact," so if "Industry Insights" is a proper name (as the title), it should be left as is. However, in the original text, it's written as "Industry Insights" without quotation marks or any indication it's a title. The user might consider titles as proper nouns. Alternatively, maybe they are not. This is a bit ambiguous. Since the user mentioned "Keep names intact," and "Industry Insights" is a heading, perhaps it should remain unchanged. However, the instruction says to replace all words except names. So since it's a section heading and not a proper name, it should be modified. But "Industry" and "Insights" are regular words. So "Industry Insights" becomes "Business Perspectives|Market Analysis|Sector Observations".

Continuing this process for each word, ensuring that proper nouns are left as they are. For example, in "“Keeping Score” by Janet Mason," "Janet Mason" remains unchanged, but "Keeping Score" is enclosed in quotes but still a title, so it stays. However, the word "performance" later can be presentation. First sentence: "I can create a sample article for you

But wait, in the original text, the user wrote "Industry Insights" as the last line. Let me check the original text again: