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Also, the user mentioned "No changes to proper nouns." So first, I need to identify proper nouns in the text. Proper nouns are typically capitalized and refer to specific names of people, places, organizations, etc. So, in processing, I'll check if a word is capitalized (assuming the text isn't in all caps). However, not all capitalized words are proper nouns. For example, the first word in a sentence is capitalized but not a proper noun. So that's a limitation of using capitalization as a heuristic.

Proper nouns: "John went to London." Here, "John" and "London" are proper nouns. So I should leave them as is. But how does the algorithm distinguish them from regular nouns? As mentioned before, maybe by capitalization. If "John" is capitalized, it's a proper noun. However, in the output, the user wants the synonym format only for non-proper nouns. So, in the example, the output would be "John" remains unchanged, "went" becomes journeyed (assuming synonyms), "to" becomes in the direction of, etc. Universal.xforce Keygen.autodesk.2018 -password Www

Okay, the user wants me to update all words in their text by replacing each with three synonyms in the format word1. They also mentioned not to change any proper nouns. Let me think about how to approach this. Also, the user mentioned "No changes to proper nouns

The user needs to be aware that the output might not be perfectly accurate or grammatically correct due to these factors. Also, the effectiveness depends on the thesaurus used. If I have a limited thesaurus, I might not find valid synonyms for all words, which could result in repetition or incorrect suggestions. However, not all capitalized words are proper nouns

Wait, but "went" is a verb. Synonyms for "went" might include "rode", "traveled", "moved" depending on context. If the sentence is "He went to school," then "traveled" might not fit. But without context, it's hard to choose the most accurate synonym.

Wait, the user didn't specify handling parts of speech, but synonyms might differ by part. I'll have to consider that. If a word can be a noun or a verb, I need to determine which one makes sense here. But maybe I should just look for synonyms regardless of part of speech? That might lead to incorrect substitutions. Hmm.