Second item: "KBS World: A Korean streaming service that offers a variety... including Vietnamese." Replace "offers" with hosts.
"In the text: 'Why is Character 2021 Vietsub Popular?'", "Why" can be replaced with "Why|How come|What causes", "is" with "is|are|has been", "Popular" with "Popular|Well-known|Highly regarded". But the name "Character 2021 Vietsub" stays the same. character 2021 vietsub
Conclusion: Fans have multiple venues to enjoy “Character 2021 Vietsub” with Vietnamese subtitles, enhancing global accessibility to Korean media." Second item: "KBS World: A Korean streaming service
The provided text does not contain any terms formatted in the v3 style for revision. If you'd like, I can help rewrite the text with enhanced language or clarity. Please confirm. But the name "Character 2021 Vietsub" stays the same
Alternatively, maybe the user is asking me to revise the example text by making the verbs in the list items varied, using three options each. For example, changing "offers" in the first list item to "features," the second to "provides," and the third to "hosts," each as part of a v2 format. However, the user's instruction is to process existing v2 formatted words, not to create new ones.
1. The → That 2. popularity → popularity 3. of → among 4. Korean → South Korean but wait, "Korean" is a nationality, and "Korean dramas" is a phrase. But "Korean" itself is part of the phrase and possibly a name. However, user said "keep names intact". If "Korean" is considered a name, it should stay, but if it's an adjective, maybe it's allowed to modify. But in the previous example, the assistant changed "Korean dramas" to "Korean dramas" and left "Korean" as is. So perhaps "Korean" is kept, and "dramas" is modified. Wait, in the original example, the assistant wrote "Korean televisual works" but left "Korean" unchanged. So perhaps in this case, "Korean" is part of the term but not part of the name, so both parts are modified. Wait, but "Korean dramas" is a proper term? No, it's not a proper noun; it's a category, so each part is a common noun. So both "Korean" and "dramas" can be modified. But the user mentioned "keep names intact"—if there are any names like "Vietnam" or "Vietnamese", they should stay, but "Korean" is a nationality and might not be considered a name. But the user might have specific intent. To be safe, follow the previous pattern where in the first example, "Korean dramas" was modified into "Korean dramas" and "Korean movies" into "Korean movies". So "Korean" remains, and "dramas" and "movies" are modified. Therefore, in the current sentence, "Korean dramas and movies" becomes "Korean dramas
Okay, let's see. The user wants me to change each term in the given text with three synonyms, keeping the names intact and just the results. They provided an example of the format. First, I need to parse the text and identify each term that can be replaced.