New! — Easeus Partition Master.v9.1.0 Professional Edi...

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New! — Easeus Partition Master.v9.1.0 Professional Edi...

- Manage - your - home - computer's - hard - drive - with - ease, - and - ensure - data - safety

Another thing to watch out for is compound words or phrases. For instance, "disk copy" should each be replaced individually unless they form a proper noun or a term that's part of the software's features, which in this case they are not. So, "disk" becomes "Drive|Storage|Volume," and "copy" as before.

I'll proceed step by step, line by line, ensuring each word is correctly replaced while maintaining the structure and meaning of the original text. Once done, I'll review the entire output to verify that proper nouns are intact and that the synonyms effectively replace the original words without altering the intended message. EASEUS Partition Master.v9.1.0 Professional Edi...

Wait, the user mentioned "each term", so maybe I need to replace all words except the brand names. But that might be too much. Let me recheck the query. It says "each term with 3 synonyms using syn3 format. Keep brand names." So probably, each term in the text (every word?) except the brand. But some words like "is" or function words shouldn't be changed. Hmm, maybe the user wants to replace significant terms, like key nouns or verbs. I need to be cautious here.

Looking at the text again, the first part says "You can download EASEUS Partition Master v9.1.0 Professional Edition from the official EASEUS website. The software is available for purchase as a one-time license, with a 30-day money-back guarantee." There's no three options here. The conclusion part says "top-notch partition management tool that offers advanced features, ease of use, and excellent value for money." Here, "advanced features", "ease of use", "excellent value for money" are three items. Those could be formatted as ease of use. Similarly, "home user or an IT professional" is a two-part list, but the user didn't ask for that. - Manage - your - home - computer's

- Home (proper noun if it's the name of the product, but here it's just the category title, so not a proper noun). So "Home" is part of "Home Users," which is a proper noun (as a section title). But maybe the user considers titles as proper nouns. Since titles are usually capitalized, but the instruction says to skip proper nouns. So perhaps "Home Users" is a proper noun here. So the first word "Home" is part of a proper noun, so skip. Then "Users" is also part of "Home Users." So skip both. Then colon and comma are punctuation. Next word is "Manage" which is a verb. So "Manage" can be replaced withAdminister.

So, in the result, these three items would be replaced with a single formatted term. However, since they are separated by commas, the user might want to replace the entire list with the three options. Let me check the original instruction again: "all terms with 3 options as word1. Leave names unchanged. Result only." So, in the text, any term that has three options should be replaced. The example provided by the user in the problem statement is word2, which suggests that in the text, the user wants to take terms that are part of a list of three and format them accordingly. I'll proceed step by step, line by line,

Let me double-check if I missed any terms. The example had "Comprehensive Review" translated to Comprehensive. Applying that pattern here. Also, the list format must remain with bullet points using asterisks.