Tera Link

Then the next sentence: "With the increasing demand for high-speed data transfer, reliable, and secure connections have become a necessity."

"its" → its (Possessive, but "its" refers to Tera Link, so maybe keep their? Not sure, but the user didn't specify, so proceed.) tera link

Wait, the user included that part as an example. Let me check the original text again for the equations. In the user's input, the line is: "$$Tera Link = High-Speed Connectivity for a Connected World$$". The user wants to rephrase every word here, so "High-Speed" becomes three options, "Connectivity" three options, etc. But "Tera Link" stays, and "equal" to an equals sign. Wait, the equals sign isn't a word. But the phrase "High-Speed Connectivity for a Connected World" has words that need rephrasing. So maybe replace "equal" with "equivalent to" or similar, but the original uses "=". Since the user wrote it with $$ symbols, perhaps keeping the equation structure. Hmm. Maybe the user wants the rephrased version to maintain the same structure, so "$$Tera Link = variant1|variant2|variant3 ...$$". Each word in the phrase after the equals sign is rephrased with three options. But the user might have intended the entire equation to be rephrased, including the equals sign, but the equals sign isn't a word. Maybe just rephrase the words around it. For example, "Tera Link equals High-Speed Connectivity..." becomes "Tera Link is equivalent to Ultra-Fast Networking...". But the user's original uses "Tera Link = High-Speed Connectivity...", so in the rephrased version, the equals sign might stay, but the words are replaced. For example: Then the next sentence: "With the increasing demand

Grow Satisfy Requirements of Expanding Systems and Services. In the user's input, the line is: "$$Tera

"making" → making, "it" → that (but "it" refers to Tera Link, but since we skip proper nouns, maybe replace "it" with it? Wait, "it" is a pronoun, but the user wants each word replaced. However, pronouns like "it" might be tricky. The user's example might not have pronouns, but instructions don't exclude them. So proceed.

In "smart cities," synonyms might be intelligent, urban, or metropolitan. So metropolitan cities.