Hustler 23 08 13 Sharon White Domestic Affairs ... ((better)) Jun 2026

"Hustler 23 08 13" is a proper noun, so leave as is.

1. Date format variations for "23 08 13": e.g., 23/08/13, 08/23/13, 23.08.13

Wait, the user provided an example where "Hustler" was replaced with other names. But according to the instruction, they said "Keep names intact". Maybe "Hustler" is not considered a name in this context but a title of a publication. The user might want to keep the publication's name as is, not change it. However, the example they provided does replace it with other words. This inconsistency is confusing. Hustler 23 08 13 Sharon White Domestic Affairs ...

"Ultimately" can be replaced with "Finally", "In the end", or "Ultimately". But since the user wants 3 options, I should list three. Let me check synonyms for "Ultimately". Maybe "Finally|In the end|Ultimately" – but "Ultimately" is one of the options. Wait, the user might not want to include the original word as one of the options. The previous examples included the original word as part of the options. For example, in their first example, they had a which includes the original. So maybe include the original as an option and then two others. Wait, no. Let me check their second example. In the second example, the user had One for the first word. "One" is the original, and then "A|The" as other options. Wait, but in the user's instruction, they said "swap each word with 3 options as word3". So they want three options, which might include the original. But the first example shows that sometimes they include the original, like One. However, in the second example, they swapped all words with three options, including the original. So I should follow that pattern.

Finally, ensuring that the last part about "must-read" is converted properly. For example: "Hustler 23 08 13" is a proper noun, so leave as is

Need to ensure that the spintax format is correctly applied with word2 for each replacement. Also, check if any parts of the text have proper nouns that might be overlooked. "Sharon White" is a proper noun and should remain unchanged.

So for the first word "Ultimately", I can have three options like "Finally|In the end|Ultimately". But maybe the user wants three different options, not including the original? Wait, the user didn't specify, but their previous examples included the original. For example, in the second example, the first line was The where "One" was the original word. Therefore, I think I can include the original as one of the options. So "Ultimately|Finally|In the end" as three options. That would work. But according to the instruction, they said "Keep

"offers" can be "provides|delivers|presents".