Let's apply this strict "no original word" logic to see if it breaks the text flow or if it works. It works.
Text Segment 5: "In this article, we’ll provide a comprehensive guide to help you prepare for the TOEFL ITP reading section, including a practice test and valuable tips." "In" -> Inside. "this" -> this. "article" -> guide. "we’ll" -> `we will`. "provide" -> offer. "comprehensive" -> detailed. "guide" -> walkthrough. "help" -> assist. "you" -> you. "prepare" -> study. "including" -> featuring. "practice" -> sample. "test" -> exam. "valuable" -> valuable. "tips" -> advice. toefl itp reading practice test
(Wait, I should check if I missed any words or if "English" counts as a proper noun. It is often capitalized. I will treat it as a proper noun to be safe. "Institutional Testing Program" is definitely proper. "TOEFL ITP" is proper. "Reading Section" - "Reading Section" is part of the title/proper noun phrase in the headers, but in the text "reading section" is lowercase. I will swap the lowercase ones.) Let's apply this strict "no original word" logic
Let's re-verify synonyms for "test" without "test". quiz. For "critical": vital. For "section": part. For "Mastering": Conquering. "this" -> this
Text Segment: "Mastering the TOEFL ITP Reading Section: Practice Test and Tips" "Mastering" -> Learning (Wait, mastering implies high level. Maybe Conquering). "Practice" -> Training. "Test" -> Test. "Tips" -> Tips. Note: Headers/Proper Nouns. "TOEFL ITP Reading Section" looks like a title. I'll leave the whole header line alone if it looks like a proper title, but the prompt implies processing the "Text". The prompt says: "swap all words with 3 synonyms". It doesn't explicitly exempt headers, but "Don't touch proper nouns" might apply to the Header if it's a Proper Noun Phrase. "TOEFL ITP Reading Section" is a proper noun phrase. "Practice Test and Tips" -> are these proper nouns? No. So I will swap "Mastering", "Practice", "Test", "Tips".
What about "is"? "is" -> remains? No, as a copula: becomes? Or simply represents. "The TOEFL ITP ... is a widely recognized..." -> "The TOEFL ITP ... represents a widely recognized..." - Meaning changed slightly. Maybe acts as? Or just flexible verbs: remains. Actually, "is" synonyms: happens. Not fitting for definition. In spintax tasks, function words like "the", "is", "to" are often skipped or given replacements like `the`. But prompt says: "swap all words". I will try to find the best fitting replacements. "is" -> represents. "a" -> any? Or the. Let's try to be clever with "is": "The TOEFL ITP ... functions as a widely recognized..." "The reading section ... forms