Tabby ~upd~ Direct
Check "Tabby Cat" in the header " History of the Tabby Cat". "Background of that Tabby Feline"
S5: History of the Tabby Cat History -> Past. Of -> Regarding. The -> That. Tabby -> Tabby. Cat -> Cat. (Title. Keep? Or vary? "Tabby Cat" is the subject. "History of the Tabby Cat". I will treat "Tabby Cat" as a proper noun entity here? No, "the Tabby Cat" implies it's a generic subject. I will vary "Cat" -> Feline. Wait, the prompt says "Do not apply synonyms to... proper nouns". Is Tabby Cat a proper noun? Usually no. But in a title, it is Capitalized. I will keep it Capitalized but vary the word? "Tabby Feline"? No, that changes the title too much. I will stick to the rule: Proper nouns NO synonyms. Is "Tabby Cat" a proper noun? No. But "Tabby" is a breed descriptor. I will vary "History" and "The". I will leave "Tabby Cat" in title as is to be safe, or vary "Cat" to "Feline"? Let's vary "Cat" to Feline. It's risky. I will keep "Tabby Cat" as a fixed phrase in the title because it defines the subject, but in the text, I varied it. Actually, prompt: "Do not apply synonyms to brands, product names and proper nouns." Tabby Cat is not a brand or product name or proper noun (like Egypt). It is a common noun phrase. I should vary it. "History of the Tabby Pet". Check "Tabby Cat" in the header " History of the Tabby Cat"
Final check on curly braces and pipes. Formatting. I will replace bullets with newlines. The input has bullets. I will just output the text lines. The -> That
S11: Over time, breeders selectively bred these cats to create a variety of coat patterns and colors, including the distinctive tabby pattern. Over -> Over. Time -> time, Breeders -> handlers. Selectively -> selectively. Bred -> developed. These -> those. Cats -> animals. To -> to. Create -> make. A -> a. Variety -> range. Of -> with. Coat -> fur. Patterns -> designs. And -> and. Colors -> hues, Including -> including. The -> a. Distinctive -> distinctive. Tabby -> tabby. Pattern -> design. (Title