"Are you looking to download Mac OS Qcow2 for your virtualization needs? Look no further! In this article, we’ll provide you with a comprehensive guide on how to download and use Mac OS Qcow2, including the latest updates."
Breaking down:
That complicates things. How to handle phrases versus individual words. The initial instruction says "switch each word with 3 options", but maybe in some cases, multi-word phrases can be grouped. However, the example shows that "Are you" is a single option. So perhaps the correct approach is to group certain phrases. However, without prior knowledge of the text's structure, it's challenging. For the scope of this task, maybe follow the example's method: look for common collocations like "Are you" and group them into a spintax option.
First, identify the proper nouns. The main one here is "Mac OS Qcow2". I think "Mac OS" and "Qcow2" are separate, but the user specified that proper nouns stay. So "Mac OS Qcow2" as a whole might be a proper noun. Wait, but according to the user's instruction, proper nouns should stay as they are. So words like "Mac", "OS", "Qcow2", "QEMU", "VirtualBox" might be proper nouns. Wait, maybe "Mac OS Qcow2" is a proper noun. Hmm, need to confirm.
So the task is to go through each word in the text, check if it's a proper noun (like Mac OS Qcow2, QEMU, VirtualBox), and if not, replace it with three synonyms (spintax). But how to determine if a word is a proper noun here? Since the user provided a sample input and expected output, maybe I can infer that any capitalized words that are part of specific terms (like product names or titles) should remain. For example, "Mac OS Qcow2" is a term, so each part of it might need to stay unless the parts are separate. Wait, but "Mac OS" and "Qcow2" might be separate here. Let me check the original text again.