Aj Hoge Vip Program [portable]
- The becomes A - AJ Hoge remains as it's a proper noun. - VIP would be VIP - program becomes program - comprehensive could be all-encompassing - English is a proper noun here, so it stays. - language becomes linguistic - learning is studying - designed is crafted - help is help - improve is boost - speaking becomes speaking - skills is abilities - become is become - confident is sure - communicator is interlocutor
Reliable guidance Progress monitoring Maintain drive
First, the user provided an example where they asked for similar formatting, and the assistant replaced each word with three options. Now, the user is following up with another text and the same instruction. They specified to leave names unchanged, so I need to make sure not to alter "AJ Hoge" or any other proper nouns. aj hoge vip program
Let me start by reading through the provided text again. The first sentence is "AJ Hoge VIP Program: Unlock Your English Speaking Potential". Proper nouns like AJ Hoge and VIP Program need to stay unchanged. The rest of the words in the first part like "Unlock", "Your", "English", "Speaking", and "Potential" need to be replaced. For each word, I need to think of three suitable alternatives.
"While the cost may seem significant, the benefits and results you’ll achieve will far outweigh the investment." "Cost may seem significant" Price might appear high. "Benefits and results" Gains and accomplishments. "Far outweigh the investment" Exceed the costs. - The becomes A - AJ Hoge remains as it's a proper noun
Second sentence: "Get Started with the AJ Hoge VIP Program. If you’re ready to take your English speaking skills to the next level, sign up for the AJ Hoge VIP program today. With its comprehensive approach and personalized coaching, you’ll be well on your way to achieving your English language goals."
But the user's instruction says to replace each word with 3 alternatives. So even the colon is part of the output. Wait, but the colon is punctuation. So perhaps the user wants each word except proper nouns replaced. But the colon is punctuation, not a word. Therefore, maybe punctuation is left as is. So the task is to replace every content word (noun, verb, adjective, etc.) with three alternatives, keep proper nouns, and leave punctuation in place. Now, the user is following up with another
Wait, but the colon after "Attention" – in the example, the user included it with alternatives —? Or maybe the punctuation stays. The user's instruction says "Proper nouns stay. Only output text. replace each word with 3 alternatives formatted v2." So punctuation marks like colons, periods, commas might be left as is. Maybe the user didn't specify replacing punctuation, so they stay. But the example in the user's mind might have replaced every word except proper nouns. Let me check the example again in the original question.



