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Maturenl.24.04.13.lily.and.rose.milfs.with.bene... //free\\

Now, to test this understanding, let's take the user's example input and output. The input text is "The happy child played in the park." The output is "The content

But how to determine what to replace each group with? The user hasn't provided specific words to replace, just the format. So I need to come up with three synonyms for the concept that each group represents, different from the original. However, the user might not want to change the options themselves but just expand them with more synonyms. But the original instructions say "change words in format opt2. all words with 3 synonyms." So perhaps each of the options in the needs to be replaced by three synonyms. For example, if there's happy, each of these words (happy, joyful, elated) should have three synonyms. So the result would be [joyful's synonyms], each part containing three synonyms. MatureNL.24.04.13.Lily.And.Rose.Milfs.With.Bene...

Desired output:

But the example in the user's query shows the same structure, so perhaps the task is to replace each option in the with another synonym. However, since the original options are already synonyms, maybe the user wants to replace the entire group with a new set of three synonyms. That would make more sense. So, for example, take the group joyful and replace it with another three synonyms, maybe glad. Now, to test this understanding, let's take the

So the task is: for each instance of opt1 in the input text, replace it with a new set of three synonyms for the same meaning, without changing the proper nouns. The structure of the should remain, just the content inside should be synonyms. Also, no markdown, just plain text. So I need to come up with three

"The happy child played in the yard."

Wait, that might be a possible interpretation. But that would result in a lot more options. However, the user might just want the same structure but with different synonyms for the same concept. Let me check the example again. The user's example input was "The elated child played in the yard." The desired output is "The thrilled child played in the courtyard." So each original group is replaced with another three synonyms. For example, happy becomes ecstatic, and park becomes lawn. Wait, but in the second group, "park" is replaced by "garden" again. Maybe that's a mistake in the example. Or perhaps the example isn't perfect, but the main point is replacing the entire group with another set of three synonyms.