-girlsdoporn- | 18 Years Old - E390 -22.10.2016- !!top!!
"shines" → glows
Another example: "She runs fast." "She" is a proper pronoun, but it's not a proper noun. Wait, "She" is a pronoun, not a proper noun. So replace it. But she is a pronoun; synonyms could be he or herself. Not sure, but follow the instruction. -GirlsDoPorn- 18 Years Old - E390 -22.10.2016-
Now, handling proper nouns. If the input is "Apple released a new iPhone," I should leave "Apple" and "iPhone" as they are. Proper nouns are capitalized, so I can check for that. But in the case of "the United States," "United States" is capitalized and should be skipped. However, if a word is part of a proper noun but lowercase in context, like "the river Thames," but "Thames" is proper. But that's more complex. Maybe stick to the rule: if a word is capitalized at the start of a sentence, it's not a proper noun. Wait, not helpful. Maybe better to flag any properly capitalized words (not just first word of sentence) as possible proper nouns. For example, "John went to Paris." "John" and "Paris" are proper. But how to programmatically detect that? "shines" → glows Another example: "She runs fast