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Soft Buns -final- -cartoon Honey Bunny- Verified Jun 2026

an → a, some (but "some era" might not make sense, but user wants three alternatives regardless)

Wait, the user used $() for some words in the example. In the example, they used $$(but)$$ and others. But in the instructions, they said to swap every word with 3 synonyms. So maybe the dollar signs are just for emphasis in the example, but I need to ignore them here. Or perhaps the user wants to format the substituted words in a specific way. Soft Buns -Final- -Cartoon Honey Bunny-

fans → followers (reused from before)

Make sure that the synonyms fit in the grammatical structure. For example, "arrived" as "Arrived|Revealed|Released" – "Revealed" might not fit exactly, but in context, it's acceptable. "Released" is a good synonym here. an → a, some (but "some era" might

So for each content word (nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs), find three synonyms. For example, "beloved" becomes "cherished|admired|esteemed". "Conclusion" could be "end|finality|culmination". "Beloved" is an adjective, so find three synonyms. "Marked" could be "signaled|indicated|noted". So maybe the dollar signs are just for

Now, for the proper nouns like "Honey Bunny", skip. Also, in the second paragraph: "What’s Next for Honey Bunny?" – "What's" is a contraction, not proper noun, so What will perhaps? But need to check the exact format. The user wants each word with three alternatives in c format. So "What’s" could be What's? But maybe the user expects the actual word. Since it's a contraction, maybe break it into "What's" and "for", etc. Hmm.

Another example: "mark the end of an era" becomes "mark|signify|denote the end|final phase|ultimately conclusion of an era". So "mark" could be "signal", but "denote" might not sound right. Maybe "signal|signify|denote".