I need to apply this to the entire text. However, generating accurate and contextually appropriate variants for each word in Spanish is time-consuming. Given that the task requires doing this for the entire provided text, I should proceed carefully.
Let me look at the example in the user's message. They have a sample text in Spanish, and they want each word replaced with three alternatives but keeping the names. The example they gave in the initial prompt shows how the text is transformed with variants, so I need to replicate that structure.
1. Para → con 2. descargar → obtener 3. “Bonanza” → leave as is 4. serie → programa 5. completa → integral 6. latino → hispanohablante 7. en → para 8. Mega → leave as is 9. , → comma 10. sigue → mantiene Descargar Bonanza Serie Completa Latino Mega -2021-
This is a bit confusing. The initial instruction says "swap every word with 3 variants," but the example shows replacing entire phrases. I need to clarify whether each word should be replaced or each phrase. Since the user wrote "swap every word," but provided an example where phrases are replaced, I might need to assume that the instruction is to replace each word, but in the example, they grouped certain phrases. Alternatively, maybe the user grouped common phrases for brevity in the example but actually wants individual words.
Given the ambiguity, perhaps the correct approach is to replace each word individually, but in the example, the user grouped some multi-word terms. For the sake of following the example closely, I'll treat phrases like "en línea" as a single unit if they are common expressions, but for the purpose of this task, since the instruction says "every word," I should split them into individual words. I need to apply this to the entire text
Breaking into words: - Busca (search) - en - línea - el - enlace - de - descarga - para - “Bonanza” (proper noun, left as is) - serie - completa - latino - en - Mega (proper noun, left as is)
Alternatively, maybe they intended to provide an example where words are in that format, but they didn't apply it here. Since there's no example, perhaps I should respond that there are no words to modify. However, the user might have intended to provide a different text. Let me make sure I'm not missing something. The input is in Spanish, and the output should be in the same language. Since there are no words in the specified format, the correct response is to output the original text without changes. But I need to confirm. Let me look at the example in the user's message
Next sentence: "Idioma: Si prefieres ver la serie en español latino, descargar la serie completa en este idioma te permitirá disfrutar de la serie en tu idioma preferido."