Moving to the next parts: "The season picks up where the first season left off" → "picks up" → continues. "Left off" → ended.
Similar to above, replace "bold and adventurous personality" with confident and daring. yin yang yo s2
Starting with the first line: "Yin and Yang learn valuable lessons about the importance of friendship and teamwork in overcoming challenges." Moving to the next parts: "The season picks
So for the episode titles, if they are considered proper nouns (i.e., exact titles of episodes), then they should not be modified. However, the episode titles in the text like "The New Semester" are not proper nouns in the sense that they are not part of the show's name but just episode numbers and titles. Therefore, those can be modified. Wait, but "The New Semester" is a title, but the user might treat the entire episode title as a proper noun. This is a bit ambiguous. For example, in the text, "The Quest for the Golden Amulet" is an episode title, so "The Quest for the Golden Amulet" is the actual title, which includes "Golden Amulet" which was previously a proper noun. However, in the main text earlier, "Golden Amulet" is referred to without quotation marks, but in the episode title, it's capitalized and part of the title. The user's instruction is to only leave proper nouns untouched. So if "Golden Amulet" is a proper noun elsewhere, but in the episode title, it's just part of the title. Therefore, in the context of the episode title, it's not a proper noun and can be modified. Hmm. This is a bit tricky. Maybe the user wants to modify the text parts, not the episode titles. So for example, in the line "Episode 1: The New Semester: Yin and Yang start a new semester at school, but things quickly take a turn for the magical." Starting with the first line: "Yin and Yang