"There are" → Here exist...
Breaking down:
Looking at the first sentence: "There are several reasons why VOIP.DLL might be causing issues in World of Tanks." For "There," possible synonyms could be "Here," "Below," or "Present." "Are" could be "exist" or "lie." However, the user wants three options each. Wait, the original instruction says "alter every word with 3 synonyms in spintax: y." So each word, except proper nouns, needs three synonyms. Let me make sure. voip.dll world of tanks
Let's start with the first line: "Uninstall World of Tanks from your computer." "Uninstall" becomes Delete, "from" becomes from, and "your computer" could be your computer. "There are" → Here exist
System → system file → document corruption → degradation : → (punctuation) Corruption → Damage of → of system → platform files → files can → could also → Let me make sure
To do this: "Right-click the game launcher: Right-click on the World of Tanks launcher."
I also need to watch out for contractions like "they're" which should be kept as he or she is but the user might prefer to keep contractions as they are. The example the user provided kept "they're" as they be—wait, that's not correct. Wait, in the example, the original was "they’re relatively easy" and the output was "they’re|they’re|they’re relatively", but that seems off. Maybe the user made a mistake there. Let me check. No, the example response for "they’re relatively easy" becomes "they’re|you’re|he’s relatively easy". Hmm, that's odd because "they’re" is correct. Maybe the user intended to replace "they’re" with "you’re", which doesn't make sense. Wait, maybe I need to consider that "they’re" is a contraction of "they are" and the alternatives could be "you're", "he is", etc., but in the context, maybe the user wants to replace the entire phrase, not the pronoun. Alternatively, perhaps the user made a mistake in their example, but I should follow their format.