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Given that the user provided an example of converting to y, maybe they want to take a text with similar structures but without the spintax formatting and turn them into proper spintax. So, in the actual scenario, when the user provides the text with terms having three variants, I need to wrap them in curly braces with pipes separating the options.
Another example: "The [red|blue|green] iPhone is popular." Here, "Apple", "iPod", "iPhone" might be part of the variations, but they are proper nouns. Wait, no—if the user intended "Apple", "iPod", "iPhone" as product names, they are proper nouns and should stay. But if they are being used as examples of devices, maybe they are considered common nouns. This is a bit ambiguous. Proper nouns are specific names, so "Apple Inc." is a proper noun, but "apple" is a common noun. So the user would need to specify which are proper. However, the instruction says to keep proper nouns as they are. So perhaps in the given text, any known proper nouns are marked, but since the user hasn't provided specific text, I can only follow the process. OnlyFans 24 09 18 Miss Jai Yourboyfcisco Red Li...
Since the user hasn't provided the actual text to convert, I can't perform the task on a specific example. However, when they do provide the text, I'll process it according to these steps. Given that the user provided an example of
Wait, the instruction says "convert every term with 3 variants in spintax". So the task is to take the given text and find any terms that have three different forms or variations and replace them with the spintax syntax. However, the example shows x, so maybe the user wants to wrap any term that has three possible synonyms or alternatives into this format. Wait, no—if the user intended "Apple", "iPod", "iPhone"
But the user mentioned "proper nouns stay". So if there's a proper noun in the text, like "Tesla", I shouldn't touch it. For example, if the text is "Tesla Model 3 is a [quick|fast|swift] car", then the spintax would be "Tesla Model 3 is a swift car", leaving "Tesla Model 3" unchanged as it's a proper noun.
But how exactly to identify the terms? The user might have provided a list or have specific terms to replace. Alternatively, they might want to apply this to any term in the text that has three options listed. However, in typical spintax use, the spintax is already present. So perhaps the user is asking to convert standard text with three possible words into spintax brackets. For example, if the text says "He has a car, vehicle, or automobile", then convert that into He has a car.