Khyapa -2020- Bengali S03 — Complete Web-dl H264 ...

One detail: `[insert main cast members]` "insert" -> `add` "main" -> `key` "cast" -> `cast` "members" -> `people` This adheres to "convert each word".

Final Plan: 1. Tokenize text. 2. Identify names (Khyapa, Raja, Indian, Bengali - arguably Indian/Bengali are adjectives, but often treated as spin-able. However, names like Raja/Khyapa must stay). "Indian" and "Bengali" can have synonyms (e.g., Hindi/Bangla - though Bengali is a language, Hindi is different. Synonyms for Bengali: Bangla. Synonyms for Indian: South Asian? Or just keep it? I'll provide close synonyms: Bengali -> Bangla, Indian -> Indian (or pan-Indian). 3. Generate synonyms for every other word. 4. Maintain punctuation positions outside the braces for best practices, or inside if attached. I will keep the text structure identical to the input regarding punctuation placement to ensure "Keep names intact" and "Only the result" doesn't break the formatting. *Input:* `...story, making...` *Output:* `...tale, rendering...` Khyapa -2020- Bengali S03 Complete WEB-DL H264 ...

Refining specific words: - "Khyapa": Name (Intact). - "Raja": Name (Intact). - "Indian": Adjective (Spinnable: Indian|Desi|National). - "Bengali": Adjective (Spinnable: Bengali|Bangla|Regional). - "“" / "”" / "": Formatting (Intact). - "[insert main cast members]": The user didn't ask to fill it, but to convert words. I will spin the words inside the brackets. `[insert|place|put] key performer members`. One detail: `[insert main cast members]` "insert" ->

Let's generate the response.

Original: "“" / "”" These are HTML entities for quotes. I will treat the text as plain text tokens. If I change "“" to `“`, it might be messy. Usually, in these spintax tasks, punctuation is left alone or attached to the word. However, often "word" implies alphanumeric sequences. Let's assume punctuation stays outside or is part of the "word" token if attached. Standard practice: `opt2`. Punctuation attached to word: `plot,` or `narrative,`. The latter is better for spinning. "Indian" and "Bengali" can have synonyms (e