That fast brown fox leaps across a lazy animal.
Additionally, the user wants the output in the exact format opt2 for each word, keeping the structure of the original text. So the final output should have the same sentence structure but with each word replaced by its curly bracket options, except proper nouns. Soha Ali Khan Gets Undressed - Beauty Salon - Leaked MMS
But what if there are only two true synonyms? Third could be a near synonym or a rephrasing. For example, "The car is red" becomes "The car is scarlet". All are synonyms for red. But if the word was "drive," operate. That fast brown fox leaps across a lazy animal
Another example: "The cat sat on the mat." Proper nouns: none. Each word gets three options. "The": A. "cat": kitten. "sat": perched. However, "kitten" might imply a young cat, so maybe better to use cat to stay neutral. Wait, "cat" is the original word, so can't include it again. So kitten. But what if there are only two true synonyms
I think that's a solid approach. Now, the user might be testing if the assistant can handle different parts of speech and context, but the main goal is to provide three alternatives for each non proper noun. The assistant should proceed with that in mind.