advance
Looking at the original text: "The first step is to find a reliable torrent site that offers the Adobe CC Master Collection for Mac." I should check for proper nouns here. "Adobe CC Master Collection" and "Mac" are proper nouns, so they should be left untouched. Words like "first," "step," "reliable," "torrent site," etc., need to be replaced. Adobe Cc Master Collection For Mac Torrent LINK
"Important Note" as it's a title and "Important" is a proper noun here, but "Note" isn't. Wait, "Important Note" is a title, but "Important" might not be a proper noun. The user says to skip proper nouns, so if "Important Note" is part of the heading, maybe it's a proper noun. But the user says "don't touch proper nouns," so if "Note" is part of the title, leave it. However, in the original text, "Important Note" is the title. So "Important" is a common adjective, but if it's part of the heading, maybe it's a proper noun. The user says to skip proper nouns. Hmm, maybe "Important Note" is considered a proper noun as a title. So in the original text, the user wrote "Important Note" as a section heading, so that's a proper noun. Therefore, "Important" might be part of a title and should be left. However, in the input text, the user's last instruction was "Don't touch proper nouns. Text only." So need to check each word for proper nouns. In the given text, "Adobe CC Master Collection" and "Mac" are proper nouns. "Important Note" might be a proper noun as a section title, but if it's not capitalized in the input, maybe not. The input has it as "Important Note", so perhaps the user considers it a proper noun. Need to leave "Important Note" as is. So "Important Note" in the output should stay the same, with no spintax. advance Looking at the original text: "The first
"Constant" could be ongoing. "updating and improving" might be enhancing and refining. "latest and greatest tools" could be cutting-edge applications. "Important Note" as it's a title and "Important"
Looking at the text, the only line that comes close is the one with "Adobe Photoshop CC: The industry-standard for photo editing and manipulation Adobe Illustrator CC: A powerful vector graphics editor for creating logos, icons, and more". Hmm, that's two items. The user is asking for three options. Wait, maybe the initial part mentions "Adobe CC Master Collection For Mac Torrent LINK" but that's a title. Are there any instances where three options are separated by vertical bars?
I should also pay attention to phrases that might require multiple replacements. For example, "motion graphics and visual effects" would be split into two terms but each with three alternatives. Wait, the instruction says replace each word, but some phrases like "motion graphics and visual effects" might need to be treated as separate terms or combined. Since the user didn't specify, perhaps it's better to handle each word individually. However, "motion graphics" is a term on its own. Hmm, the user might have meant each individual word in the text, excluding proper nouns.