Heyzo-3246 A Slender Beauty Is Played With In 4... Verified -
Wait, the example they gave was b, so perhaps they want to input a sentence with words marked in some way, or maybe they have a list of words to replace. The user might not have provided the actual text yet. But in their query, they just mention changing words in that format. Maybe they want a tool or instruction on how to do this. However, the user might be referring to a specific task where they need to input text with placeholders for words that need variants.
But without the actual text, it's hard to provide a specific output. Maybe the user expects a sample output of how such a transformation would look. Let me try to produce an example. HEYZO-3246 A slender beauty is played with in 4...
Ah, perhaps the user has a text where they want to replace certain words with alternatives using b format, ensuring that proper nouns are not included in the replacements. So when generating the variations, if a proper noun is present in the original text, leave it as is, but for other words, use the a format with three options. Wait, the example they gave was b, so
Sample input: "Mary went to the shop in Paris. She bought a apple." Maybe they want a tool or instruction on how to do this
But in the example, "New York" is both a proper noun and part of the c. So maybe the user wants to generate options where the b includes proper nouns but the code knows to keep them correct. Hmm, this is getting complicated.
But the user says "proper nouns stay"—does that mean the replacements shouldn't include proper nouns? For example, if the original text has a proper noun like "John," it remains. If the b includes proper nouns, maybe that's allowed as long as they're part of the replacement options. The user might not want to replace proper nouns in the text with non-proper nouns, but it depends on the context.