Another thing to consider is the part of speech. If a word is part of a compound noun or phrase, the substitution needs to fit that structure. For instance, "test-takers" might become candidates.
- The → This - Soumatome N2 Kanji PDF → [left as is] - is → am - a → a - valuable → beneficial - resource → reference - for → to - learners → students - of → about - the → a (but already covered earlier) - Japanese → Japonese (though "Japonese" is not correct, maybe better to stick to "Japanese" unless there are alternatives) - language → spoken language - providing → offering - comprehensive → complete - coverage → explanation - of → [same as before] - the → [same] - 1,000 → one1000thousand - kanji → kana - characters → [leave as is if proper noun; but here it's common noun. Maybe letters but not sure. Since it's about kanji, maybe better to keep as kanji unless there's a direct synonym]. - required → needed - for → [same as before] - the → [same] - N2 → [leave as is] - level → stage - of → [same] - the → [same] - JLPT → [leave as is] soumatome n2 kanji pdf
But need to be cautious. For example, using "one's" might not fit in some contexts. Alternatively, "yours", "one's own", but these might change the sentence structure. It's tricky. Assuming the user wants synonyms regardless of context, then proceed. Another thing to consider is the part of speech
I also need to watch out for words that might not have clear synonyms. For instance, "comprehensive coverage" could be "extensive collection", "thorough overview", "wide-ranging explanation". But I need to ensure that the meaning of thoroughness is preserved. - The → This - Soumatome N2 Kanji
Wait, in the example, "covers" becomes three options, so "covers|includes|features". So the original word is not included in the three. Instead, three different words are provided. Therefore, I need to replace each word with three synonyms that can fit the context, not including the original word. So for "covers", the three are different. Got it.
I also need to be careful with grammatical structures. If a word is a verb, its synonyms should also be verbs. Same with nouns and adjectives. For instance, "vocabulary" could become lexicon. I'll have to go through each sentence, word by word, generating the three options.