Okay, so the user wants me to alter every term with three variants in the a format. They mentioned to skip brands and names, and only process the text. Let me start by reading through the provided text carefully.
- "Power" could be replaced with its synonyms like Strength, Force, or Might. - "Paanch" is a name, so maybe it's a proper noun here. The user said to skip brands and names, so maybe leave it as is? Wait, the example in the query shows they replaced "Power of Paanch" with Energy and then Painch? Wait, actually, the example shows "Power of Paanch" becoming Energy regarding Paanch. Wait, maybe the user wants to replace "Power" with three variants, "of" with three variants, and "Paanch" with three variants. But "Paanch" is a name, so maybe that's considered a proper noun. Hmm, the user said to skip brands and names. So maybe "Paanch" should not be altered. But in the example given by the user in the instruction, they did replace "Paanch" with Panch. Wait, in the example they provided, they had "The Power of Paanch: Unleashing the Magic of the Web Series" transformed into Energy of Panch: Unfolding the Allure of the Streaming Show.
Now, moving to the next sentence:
gems → Treasures, Highlights, Standouts
"such gem" → "such treasure", "such highlight", "such standout" Power.Of.Paanch.S01.480p.HEVC.WeB-D...-
So putting that together in the a format:
Continuing with the example, the user's sample shows replacement for each term, even if the original term is part of a compound term. For instance, "web series" becomes Streaming Show in the example. So "web series" is two words, but the user replaces each component with options. So in "web series", "web" becomes "Online|Digital|Streaming", and "series" becomes "Production|Show|Showcase". Okay, so the user wants me to alter
a few → Several, A number of, A handful of