Wait, the user says "every term with 3 variants. Keep names intact. Only the result." So maybe for each target term, choose one variant and replace it, ensuring the names remain the same. The example provided in the user's history shows that the assistant changed words in the text with their variants, keeping the structure but varying the content words.
Original text had "1991" and the example transformed it into 1991. So in that case, the assistant changed the number. Hmm. But why? Because the user said "No changes to proper nouns." But 1991 is a year, which is a proper noun? Or is it considered as part of the title? Maybe in this context, since it's part of the title of the photoshoot, the assistant replaced it. So maybe in this case, the numbers are part of the title and need to be replaced. But the user said "no changes to proper nouns," which might include numbers as part of the title. Wait, this is confusing. Let me check the example again.
1. The 2. “ 3. - 4. Santa Fe 5. - 6. Rie 7. Miyazawa 8. Photo 9. By 10. Kishin 11. Shinoyama 12. - 13. 1991 14. - 15. 13 16. ” 17. photoshoot 18. has 19. left 20. a 21. lasting 22. impact 23. on 24. the 25. world 26. of 27. fashion 28. and 29. photography 30. -Santa Fe- Rie Miyazawa Photo By Kishin Shinoyama -1991- 13
Has -> Possesses
But without explicit b terms given, I need to infer which words to replace. Alternatively, perhaps the user made a mistake and didn't include the b terms. But given the instructions, I need to proceed based on the information given. Wait, the user says "every term with 3 variants
Left -> Left
"”" -> ”|}
Continuing this for each paragraph, ensuring that each word not a proper noun is replaced with three alternatives. I'll need to go through each sentence systematically. Once done, I'll review the entire text to check for consistency and that no proper nouns were altered. If I find any issues, I'll adjust the spintax accordingly. Finally, I'll present the final answer in the required format.