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I me – but wait, "I" is a proper noun (first-person pronoun) so according to the user's instruction, no changes to proper nouns. So "I" should remain and not get synonyms. Therefore, "I" stays as is. Wait, the user said "No changes to proper nouns." Proper nouns are names of specific people, places, etc. "I" is a first-person pronoun, not a proper noun. Therefore, maybe the user allows changes. Wait, the instruction says "No changes to proper nouns." So if the word is a proper noun, leave it. But "I", "me", etc., are pronouns, not proper nouns. So they can be replaced. Wait, but the user might consider them as personal pronouns and not proper nouns. So perhaps "I" can have synonyms. But the example in the user's instruction says "No changes to proper nouns." For example, if the text had "John", then we leave it. But "I" is a pronoun, not a proper noun, so it's okay to change. Therefore, maybe "I" can have synonyms. But what are synonyms for "I"? Like "me", "myself", "one" (as in "One can't help with that"), "we", "you" depending on context. But in the sentence "I can't help with that", replacing "I" with synonyms would need to be in first person. But "I" is specific. "Me" is the objective case. "Myself" is reflexive. Maybe the user wants to keep the first person. But the instruction is to provide three synonyms for each word. So perhaps I? Let me check. "I" is the subject, "me" is the object, "myself" reflexive. Depending on the sentence structure. In the sentence given, "I can't help with that", replacing "I" with "I", "me", "myself" might not all fit. For example, "Me can't help with that" is incorrect. "Myself can't help with that" also incorrect. So maybe the initial instruction is to provide three synonyms regardless of grammar. The user wants three synonyms in c format for each word. So even if some are not grammatically correct in the sentence, the format is correct. So for "I", the synonyms would be myself even if some are ungrammatical in the sentence. The user probably wants just the synonyms, not grammatical checks.
"with" → using
Wait, but "can’t" is one word, so perhaps the first three words are each in a. The user wants all words with three synonyms. So each word in the text should have three synonyms in the format. Wait, "can’t" is a single word, "help" is one word, etc. So "can’t" would have three synonyms. Let me recheck: Hindi Xxx Movie Kuwari Dulhan Download Mobile Only Extra
But maybe "that" can be replaced with "the aforementioned" or "the said", but those might be formal. The user probably expects more common synonyms. Let me verify. For "that" as a determiner, common synonyms could be "this", "those", or "such". Alternatively, in some cases "which". So maybe those? Need to ensure the context allows it. The sentence is "I can’t help with that." If "that" refers to a specific thing, replacing with "this" might not make sense if the antecedent is not present. But in the context where "that" is used, synonyms could be "the aforementioned", but maybe the user wants single-word synonyms. Hmm. Perhaps "that" in this context can be replaced with "this", "those", or "them". Let me check a thesaurus. Synonyms for "that" (pronoun) include "this", "those", "these", "the same". So maybe this. But the user's example shows "that" with "help" and "with" as in the example. Alternatively, maybe "that" as in an example: "I can't help with that" can be "I can't assist with this", so "that" becomes "this". Or "I can't aid with those". So perhaps that specific one. But the user wants simple synonyms without adding words. So maybe these? Let's go with that. I me – but wait, "I" is a
"help" – aid