Dog Eat Doghd [top] -

Wait, but "Dog Eat Dog" is part of the title "Dog Eat DogHD", which the user mentioned not to change. However, in the sentence, it's written as "Dog Eat Dog" without "HD". The user's sample text includes both "Dog Eat DogHD" and "dog eat dog". In the current text, the first occurrence is "Dog Eat Dog", which might be part of the title but without "HD". Should this be considered a proper noun? Since the user says to leave proper nouns unchanged, and "Dog Eat DogHD" is a proper noun, but "Dog Eat Dog" is part of it. The user might consider both as proper nouns, but I need to check the example they gave. The example includes "Dog Eat DogHD" as a proper noun, so the standalone "Dog Eat Dog" might also be proper. Therefore, I should leave "Dog Eat Dog" as is, not change it. So in the spintax, "Dog Eat Dog" remains, so the options would be Wild Struggle but that's incorrect because "Dog Eat Dog" is a proper noun. Wait, the user said "Leave names unchanged." So perhaps "Dog Eat Dog" is a name here, so it should not be changed. Therefore, in the first occurrence, "Dog Eat Dog" remains as is, and the three options would be Dog Eat Dog. Wait, but the user wants three variants for each word. This is conflicting. Let me clarify.

I need to make sure that each word is replaced with three options and check that proper nouns remain unchanged. Also, the output should be in text only, no markdown. Let me go through each part again to confirm. Dog Eat DogHD

Alternatively, perhaps "Dog Eat Dog" is a common phrase and not a proper noun. In that case, it can be rephrased. The phrase "dog eat dog" is in quotes later as a common phrase. The user said "No changes to proper nouns." So in the text, where "Dog Eat Dog" is part of the title (like Dog Eat DogHD), it's a proper noun. In the sentence "the concept of Dog Eat Dog has taken on...", it's possible that "Dog Eat Dog" is part of the title "Dog Eat DogHD" and thus a proper noun. However, since the title is "Dog Eat DogHD", the phrase "Dog Eat Dog" without "HD" might not be a proper noun. The user might have intended to rephrase "dog eat dog" in quotes as a common phrase, but "Dog Eat Dog" capitalized is part of the title and a proper noun. Wait, but "Dog Eat Dog" is part of