Another point: the user may have a specific style in mind, perhaps from a previous example they provided. Since I don't have that example, I'll follow
First, I need to go through each word in the text and identify replaceable terms. Proper nouns like "Posham Pa 2019" and "720p Hindi" should stay as they are, since the instructions specify proper nouns remain unchanged. Download - Posham Pa 2019.720p.Hindi - LatestH...
Now, moving on to the next sentence: "The movie stars Sibiraj, Saravanan, and Anupama in leading roles." Replace each word (except names): Another point: the user may have a specific
Also, "Tamil-language" is a compound adjective. Should I split it into "Tamil-language" being three options? Like Tamil or replace "language" part? Wait, "Tamil-language" is a compound, so if the task is to replace each word, then "Tamil" is part of that compound, so maybe treat "Tamil-language" as one unit and find alternatives. For example, replace "Tamil-language" with "Tamil|local|regional". But this is a bit tricky. The user might expect each individual word to be replaced. However, "Tamil-language" is a compound noun/adjective. If "Tamil" is a proper noun (the language), maybe we should leave it as is. The user's example in their query didn't have a compound like that, so maybe I should treat each word individually. Let me try to break it down. Now, moving on to the next sentence: "The
- The → The - movie → film - stars → highlights - Sibiraj → remains - , → left as is? But the user might want each word, including punctuation? Probably no. The user likely meant words only. So commas, ampersands, etc., can be left as is. So "stars" is a word to replace. Then "Sibiraj" remains. Then "Saravanan" remains. Then "and" → plus. Then "Anupama" remains. "in" → into. "leading" → star. "roles" → parts.
This seems feasible. The challenge is doing this for each word while maintaining the sentence structure. Also, ensuring that the replacements make sense in context. For example, replacing "directed" with "supervised" might not be appropriate if the context is about filmmaking, but "helmed" is a good alternative.
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