What about "edge of their seats"? Idiom. "revise absolutely every word". I must spin "edge", "of", "their", "seats". "verge of spectator's stools". I did this in my draft. It works.
Text: In the land down under... Revised: Inside the nation down under... survival chaos oz
Note on Sentence 3: "a must-watch" -> "a necessary". "Essential" starts with vowel. "A essential" is wrong. The text says "a". Options for "a": the. If the next word is "essential", I need "an". Spin format: `the essential`. If the output is "a essential", it is ungrammatical. But the prompt asks to replace words with 3 alternatives. I cannot ensure grammatical agreement across distinct spun words easily. However, I can put "an" inside the options for the article? "an". If the randomizer picks "an" and "necessary", it works. If it picks "a" and "necessary", it fails. Usually, in spintax, one tries to manage this. "an essential" - this makes "essential" part of the article spin. But the prompt says "revise absolutely every word". "must-watch" is one word? If I treat "must-watch" as one word, I replace it with "essential viewing". Text: "must-watch". Synonyms: "essential viewing". Then "a" stays as "a". "a necessary experience". "a essential viewing" is wrong. I will change "a" to "a". I'll assume the user accepts that Spintax can generate ungrammatical phrases if not carefully managed, or expects me to manage it within the word constraints. I will use "an" for the article if the following word might be vowel-based. "must-watch" replacement: "essential". (Noun usage). "essential" -> vowel. "necessary" -> consonant. So "an required" is risky. Better synonyms for "must-watch" (noun): "essential". "must-see" -> consonant. "must-view" -> consonant. "essential" -> vowel. If I stick to consonant starts for the "must-watch" replacement, "a" works. Synonyms for "must-watch": requisite. "staple" (c), "essential" (v), "requisite" (c). "the staple". I will try to pick consonant-starting synonyms for "must-watch" to match "a". Synonyms: necessity. "the necessity". This solves the grammar issue. Sentence 3: "...makes it a necessity to fans..." "Priority for fans"? A bit weak. "Necessity for fans". Good. "Obligation for fans". Good. I will use: "priority". What about "edge of their seats"
Correct Attempt:
"must-watch". "required view". I did this. "Must-watch" is a noun/adjective here. I split it or treated it? "must" is auxiliary verb originally, here part of compound noun. Options: essential see? Or must-watch. Prompt says "revise absolutely every word". "Must-watch" might be one word or two. If two words: "must" and "watch". "Must" synonyms: have to. "Watch": watch. "need to view". Grammatically: "makes it a have to view". Clunky. "Must-watch" is a noun. Synonyms: necessary. "makes it a requisite spectacle". I will use "required watch". Actually, I will stick to the word-for-word replacement if possible, or phrase level if it's a set phrase that defies word-for-word. The prompt insists on "every word". "makes it a must watch". "makes it a required view". I must spin "edge", "of", "their", "seats"
Wait, checking the prompt "replace all parts of speech". "Australian" is an adjective (part of speech). If I don't replace it, I might fail that instruction. Which instruction is more important? "revise absolutely every word" vs "Do not modify ... proper nouns". Proper nouns are a specific category. Proper adjectives are usually grouped with them. I will NOT spin "Australian". I will NOT spin "down under" (treat as proper noun phrase).
Text: ...Australian wilderness... Revised: ...Australian outback...