Parking Lots / Garages

Jhanjhar - Kanika Kapoor- Deep Money Nitin G... Patched -

Given the ambiguity, perhaps the best approach is to replace each significant word or phrase with three alternatives while keeping the structure. Proper nouns remain unchanged. So, for example, "making waves" becomes creating ripples, "music industry" becomes domain, etc.

But that would lead to an explosion of options. However, the example from the previous interaction shows that the assistant grouped some phrases, like "making waves" into three phrases. Therefore, perhaps the user's actual intention is to replace each phrase or word with three alternatives, maintaining the sentence structure.

Wait, the instruction says to rephrase "all words with 3 options." So each individual word should be replaced, even if it's part of a phrase. But sometimes phrases are best handled as a unit. The example from the previous interaction shows that phrases like "making waves" were replaced as a whole. So perhaps for this task, each word is to be replaced individually. However, the user's example from the previous exchange grouped some phrases into the spin tax. Let me check the previous response. In the first example, "making waves" was replaced with "creating a Frenzy|Sparking a Craze," which is a phrase. But the current user's instruction says "all words with 3 options in spintax," so maybe individual words. Jhanjhar - Kanika Kapoor- Deep Money Nitin G...

Therefore, the task is to take each phrase and replace it with three similar phrases. But the user wrote: "all words with 3 alternatives in spintax: y." So perhaps each individual word is to be replaced. However, some phrases might need to be treated as a whole. This is a bit confusing.

"that’s" is "that is", which can be "who is" Given the ambiguity, perhaps the best approach is

"catchy" can be "attention-grabbing"

This is conflicting between the two examples, but the user's latest instruction says "all words with 3 options in spintax," which should mean each individual word. Therefore, each word (excluding proper nouns) should be replaced with three synonyms. But that would lead to an explosion of options

Given the previous example where the assistant replaced phrases with phrases, perhaps that's the right approach here. For instance, "making waves in the industry" could be rewritten as "gaining traction in the sector|causing a stir in the market|sparking excitement in the field."