"New" could be "novel", "fresh", "newly". Wait, "new" as in "novelty". Let me confirm: "novel|fresh|newly". No, "newly" is an adverb. So better to pick "fresh", "recent", "novel".
Now, let's proceed with the sample text. Hindi Dubbed Pacific Rim - Uprising -English- Movies Full Hd
"is a 2018 science fiction monster film directed by" – each word that's not a proper noun gets "New" could be "novel", "fresh", "newly"
Breaking down each word:
The user's instruction says "every word with 3 synonyms in a format. Keep names intact." So maybe all words except names. But articles, prepositions, etc., are also words. But their synonyms might not exist. For example, the article "a" can't be replaced. Similarly, "in" is a preposition. So perhaps the user expects that only content words (nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs) to be replaced with synonyms, while function words (articles, prepositions, conjunctions) remain as is. That would make more sense, because function words typically don't have synonyms. So I need to identify the content words in the text and replace them with three synonyms in the specified format, leave names and titles intact, and leave function words unchanged. No, "newly" is an adverb