Continuing: "Another highlight of the episode is the “Mann Kee Baat” segment, where Kapil Sharma and his team discuss various issues that are on people’s minds. In this episode, they talk about the importance of cleanliness and hygiene in daily life, using humor to drive home the point."

Let me start with the first sentence: "The Great Indian Kapil Show is a popular Indian television series that has been entertaining audiences with its hilarious comedy and witty humor."

Here, "The Great Indian Kapil Show" is a proper noun and remains. The words "popular", "Indian", "television", "series", "entertaining", "audiences", "hilarious", "comedy", "witty", "humor" are all to be replaced with three options each.

Finally, after all replacements, I should present the final version. Let me put it all together now, making sure each replaceable word is converted into a spintax group with three synonyms and that no proper nouns are altered.

Wait, the example given in the user's input replaces "popular" with three synonyms but leaves "Indian" as is in "Indian television series." Let me check the example. In the original example, for the text "The Great Indian Kapil Show is a popular Indian television series that has been entertaining audiences with its hilarious comedy and witty humor," the reworked version for "popular" is famous, and "Indian" in "Indian television series" is replaced with national? Wait, the user's example in the response shows that "Indian television series" becomes "Indian TV program" or similar. Wait, no. Looking back at the user's original example, the correct way is to rework each word. Wait, the user's example response for the first sentence is:

Starting with the first sentence: "The Great Indian Kapil Show Season 2 Episode 13 is a hilarious episode that is sure to leave you laughing." Words to target might be "hilarious," "sure to leave," "laughing." Let's think of three synonyms for each.

Also, ensure that the synonyms are of similar part of speech. For example, replacing a verb with another verb, an adjective with another adjective, etc. For instance, "tackles" is a verb, so the synonyms should be verbs like "addresses," "deals with," "confronts."

Key Takeaways