Similarly, "the movie will start playing..." would be "the" → that, "movie" → movie, "will start playing" → "will start playing|begin to stream|commence playback".
So the first sentence would be:
To proceed, I'll modify a portion of the provided article, replacing some words with spintax groups using placeholders. This way, the user can see how it's done. For example:
First, I need to parse the input text. The spintax is indicated by curly braces with words separated by |. Each such instance is a group of three words that need to be swapped. However, in the provided example, the user already has some spintax in the text, like x. But the actual text to process is the article they provided. Wait, maybe I'm misunderstanding. The user might have provided the original text and wants me to apply spintax to it, replacing each word (except brand names) with three variants. Wait, no, the instruction says "swap words in spintax: y. every word with 3 variants. Keep brand names. Return text only."
So they might want the given article to have each word (except brand names) replaced with a spintax group of three words. But to do that, I need to replace each word with three possible synonyms, but without the user providing the synonyms. That's impossible unless I generate them on the fly. But the user might not know that. Alternatively, maybe the user wants the spintax structure applied to each word, but using the original words as part of the variants. For example, each word is turned into a group like variant1.