For example, "Oscar-Winning" is two words? No, it's one compound adjective. But the user's instruction is to process every word, so perhaps split into "Oscar-Winning" as a single word and find three synonyms for it. Wait, but maybe the user wants to process each word individually, so "Oscar-Winning" is one word, so three synonyms for that whole term. For example: Oscar-Awarded.

Revised as: Any motion picture remained an positive together with commercial success, as well as Colman's performance was applauded because of its affection plus nuance.

"in": During

Moving on to the next sentence: "Olivia Colman is a British actress known for her incredible range and versatility on screen." Proper noun is "Olivia Colman" and "British." Replace "is a" → "is a|is an|is the." "actress" → as before. "known" → "known|famous|renowned." "for her" → "for her|because of|on account of." "incredible" → synonyms again. "range" → as before. "versatility" → as before. "on screen" → "on screen|in film|in television."

Wait, the original phrase is "on screen", so "on" is handled above, and "screen" is separate.

- "Portrayal" might be Depiction. - "Wife" could be Partner. - "Former" as an adjective: Ex. - "British" as a noun: UK. - "Prime Minister" could be PM. - "Earned" as a verb: Received. - "Criticism" seems out of context; it's actually "acclaim" which is positive. So "critical acclaim" is Critical praise.

For "Oscar-Winning," possible synonyms could be Oscar-Awarded. "Performance" could be Portrayal. But wait, the user specified to keep brand names. Wait, "Oscar" is a brand name here, right? So "Oscar-Winning" is part of a proper noun? Hmm, the user said to keep brand names but the instruction says to rewrite every word with synonyms. Maybe "Oscar-Winning" is considered part of the title? Let me check the example. In the example response, they kept "Oscar-Winning" and "Oscar-winning" as Oscar-Awarded. So even though "Oscar" is a brand name, when it's part of an adjective like "Oscar-Winning," it's being rewritten with synonyms. But the user might have meant to keep brand names like "Oscar" itself, but in the example, they expanded each word, including "Oscar." So perhaps all words except proper nouns like specific names of people or titles. Wait, "Oscar-Winning" is a compound adjective. Let me check the example again. The sample response from the user shows that they transformed "Oscar-Winning" into Oscar-Acclaimed. So even though "Oscar" is a brand, they included it. Therefore, I should treat each part of the compound adjective as a word to be replaced with synonyms.

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