But how would that work in a sentence? For example, if the sentence is "The quick brown fox jumps over the sluggish dog." Then replacing each v1 would create three instances of the first variable and three of the second, resulting in nine variations. But the user might not want that. Alternatively, the user might want to expand each placeholder into the three synonyms separated by commas. But the user's example in their thinking seems to have kept the first synonym, but perhaps the user actually wants to replace the entire v3 with one of the three synonyms each.
But how to handle if there are multiple v3 instances in the text? For example, if there are two such placeholders, would the output have 3^2=9 variations? That could get complicated. The user's example in their thinking process shows a single replacement, replacing quick with "quick", so perhaps the user wants to remove the options and keep the first one. But that's not what their instruction says. Alternatively, maybe the user wants to generate three different versions of the text, each with a different synonym. For example, three separate lines with each synonym for each placeholder. X desi mobi holly wood rape
Wait, maybe the user has a text where they want to take a word that's in the format v2 and replace it with three different synonyms. Like if the original text is "The hasty brown fox jumps over the lazy dog," the output would be three variations: "The quick brown fox..." "The fast brown fox..." "The hasty brown fox..." etc. But no, the user says "replace words formatted v1. all words with 3 synonyms." So maybe they want the words in the bracket format to be replaced by those three synonyms. For example, in the input text, any occurrence of v2 would become "v1, v2, v3" or each instance would be replaced with one synonym each. But how would that work in a sentence
Alternatively, maybe the user's actual text has placeholders like v3, and they want to substitute each placeholder with three synonyms. For example, if the text is "The adjective cat was behavior." Replace adjective with "quick, fast, agile", and action with "jumping, running, pouncing". But the user's example might not be clear. Alternatively, the user might want to expand each