Hdmovies4u.hair-john.wick.chapter.3.parabellum.... Jun 2026
pleased celebration John
First, I need to make sure I understand the input correctly. The example given is "happy birthday John," so the task is to replace each word except proper nouns (like John) with three synonyms. The user wants the output in the same format, with the synonyms separated by | and enclosed in curly brackets.
Alright, let's tackle this request. The user wants each word in the original text replaced with three synonyms using the syn1 format. They specified to keep names intact and only provide the result. HDMovies4u.Hair-John.Wick.Chapter.3.Parabellum....
I think that's all. Let me put the final answer together.
I should check if there are any specific rules about which words to replace. It seems like all words except names should be replaced. Names are proper nouns and should stay as they are. pleased celebration John First, I need to make
I should also ensure that the replacements are accurate. "Happy" has "joyful," "elated," and "pleased" as good synonyms. "Birthday" is more challenging. "Anniversary" is a good synonym, but it's not exactly the same. However, in the context of a birthday wish, "anniversary" could work. "Day of birth" is precise. "Annual birthday" might be redundant. Alternatively, "birthday celebration" or "special day" could be used. I need to pick the three best options. Let me confirm a thesaurus. Thesaurus.com lists "anniversary," "celebration," and "day of birth" as synonyms for "birthday." So maybe anniversary is better. That could work.
Another check: does the user want the output to be in the same order as the input sentence, with each word replaced by its synonyms? Yes. So the structure is maintained, with each word (except names) substituted with the three options. Alright, let's tackle this request
Wait, the user said to keep the words in order and only replace the words with the synonyms. Let me verify each step. Did I miss any words? The original sentence has three words. Each is replaced except "John." That seems correct.