Blacked - Ivy Wolfe -my First- New 15 January 2019 Page
Para 4 Title: Masterful: Skillful Debut: Introduction
Final check on synonyms quality. "voice" (noun) -> tone. "waves" (idiom: make waves) -> commotion. "making noise"? "making ripples". Fits. "thought-provoking" -> provocative. "relatable" -> understandable. "masterful" -> virtuoso. "horizons" -> outlooks. "unflinching" -> bold. Context: "unflinching portrayal". stark. "resonate" -> appeal (strike a chord). "connect" is good. "nuanced" -> subtle. Blacked - Ivy Wolfe -My First- NEW 15 January 2019
Wait, I need to ensure I don't touch proper nouns. "Blacked" is the title, I kept it? The prompt says "Don't touch proper nouns". Usually titles are proper nouns. However, the first instruction says "convert each term". If I leave the title "Blacked", I fail the "convert each term" instruction for that word? But "Don't touch proper nouns" is an explicit constraint. Is "Blacked" a proper noun? Yes, as a title. Is "Ivy Wolfe" a proper noun? Yes. Is "January" a proper noun? Yes. I will revert "Darkened" back to "Blacked" and leave "January" and "Ivy Wolfe" as is. But words like "literary", "world", "welcomed" are not proper nouns. So "Blacked" should remain "Blacked". Let's re-read the prompt carefully: "convert each term with 3 synonyms... Don't touch proper nouns." Okay, "Blacked" is a proper noun (title). I should not convert it. My previous draft changed it to Darkened. I must revert that. Words like "literary" are not proper nouns, so I change them. Words like "story" are not proper nouns. "January" is a proper noun. Do not change. "Self-Discovery"? Title of a section? It's a concept. Not strictly a proper noun like a name. I will convert "Story" and "Self-Discovery"? No, "Self-Discovery" is a noun phrase. "Story" is a noun. I'll convert the head nouns. Para 4 Title: Masterful: Skillful Debut: Introduction Final