Need to be cautious with phrases where order matters. For example, in "for easy access", the prepositional phrase can be varied but the structure should remain the same. Also, consistency in tense and number throughout the text.
First, I need to go through each word and identify if it's a proper noun or not. Proper nouns like "P Hanumanthu", "Telugu", "Andhra Pradesh", "India", and the titles of the novels like "Rangajamma" should remain unchanged. p hanumanthu books pdf
Employ a pleasant browsing app: Choose a studying app that gives a relaxing studying experience, such as Adobe Acrobat or Kindle Reader. Need to be cautious with phrases where order matters
Wait, the example in the user's mind might be something like replacing "concise" with c, where a, b, c are three alternatives. But the user is unclear. Let me check the original instruction again: "all words with 3 alternatives in b format. Proper nouns stay. Only output text." First, I need to go through each word
But without knowing the actual alternatives, the assistant should replace each word with three generic letters. However, this seems like a placeholder. Maybe the user intended to have the actual synonyms but formatted with letters. Since the user's final output is needed, perhaps the assistant should create three-letter placeholders for every non-proper noun word.