Jujutsu Kaisen Manga __link__

Next sentence: "Whether you’re a seasoned manga reader or just starting out, Jujutsu Kaisen is definitely worth checking out. With its engaging storyline, memorable characters, and stunning artwork, this series is sure to leave you hooked." "Seasoned" becomes "Experienced", "Veteran", "Skilled". "Worth checking out" could be "Worthwhile to explore", "Recommended to try", "Advisable to consider". "Memorable characters" as "Unforgettable personas", "Notable figures", "Standout characters". "Leave you hooked" might be "Make you addicted", "Keep you captivated", "Ensure your loyalty".

Wait, "Manga" in the title is part of the name? So "Jujutsu Kaisen Manga" is a title? If so, "Manga" here is a proper noun. But usually, "manga" is a common noun, but in the title, it might be capitalized and part of the name. Hmm, depends on the user's intention. The user said "Proper nouns stay". Since "Jujutsu Kaisen" is a proper noun, but "Manga" isn't. So "Manga" is part of the title. Wait, no, the user might have written the title as "Jujutsu Kaisen Manga", so "Manga" is part of the title? Or is "Manga" a common noun? Probably, "Jujutsu Kaisen" is a proper noun, and "Manga" is a common noun. So "Manga" should be replaced. So the first part would be "The Dark Fantasy World of Jujutsu Kaisen graphic novels". Jujutsu Kaisen Manga

But the example given by the user in their initial instruction uses common nouns and adjectives, not function words. For example, their sample input had "The world of manga has given us countless stories..." which would become terms like "realm". However, the user's instruction says to alter every term. So perhaps the user expects all content words to be replaced, including adjectives, nouns, verbs, etc., but not proper nouns. Function words (articles, prepositions, conjunctions) may or may not be included. The user's example uses "The Dark Fantasy World of Jujutsu Kaisen Manga" and converts "Dark" to "morbid" etc. So probably, the user wants all content words replaced, not function words. But in the original text, there are words like "The", "of", "has", etc. Should these be altered? The user's example shows that "The Dark Fantasy World..." becomes "The morbid ...". The "The" is left as "The", but the user might have not changed it. Wait, in the example they converted "Dark" to three variants but left "The" as is. So perhaps the function words like articles, prepositions, and auxiliary verbs are kept as they are, and only the content words (nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs) are altered. That makes more sense. So in that case, the user probably wants to replace only content words, not function words. Therefore, in the original text, "The" stays "The", "of" stays "of", "has" stays "has", etc. Only the content words like "Dark", "Fantasy", "World", "manga", "countless", "stories", etc., are replaced. That would Next sentence: "Whether you’re a seasoned manga reader

good → virtuous