Portable Chrome 71 Stable __exclusive__ Jun 2026
I need to make sure the synonyms are accurate and fit the context. For example, "securely" might be "safely, privately, confidentially". Also, check if the user wants the substitution in all instances or just key terms. The instructions say "each term", so probably all words except the names. But maybe they mean specific terms. Wait, looking back, the example uses the colons and bullet points. So the main terms are the ones not in colons. The instructions say "keep names intact", so "Portable Chrome 71 Stable" and "Windows 7" stay.
Also, in the first paragraph, "and its stable version is widely used by individuals and organizations alike." Not three options here. "Portability, privacy, and convenience" – if that's another instance. Wait, the original text given in the example is up to "Features of Portable Chrome 71 Stable" so maybe that's the end. So in the provided text, the only three-option terms are "speed, security, and versatility" and "work on multiple computers, travel frequently, or need...". portable chrome 71 stable
But in the user's example, the assistant's response is the text with the first three options converted. Let's simulate that. So in the text provided, the assistant would have: I need to make sure the synonyms are
First, I need to go through each sentence and identify the terms that can be replaced. Let's start with the first paragraph. "Portable Chrome 71 Stable" is a proper noun, so it stays. Words like "allows" can be replaced with synonyms like "enables, permits, lets". "Access their browser" becomes "use their web browser" etc. The instructions say "each term", so probably all
Original: "users who work on multiple computers, travel frequently, or need to use a public computer without leaving any personal data behind." Here, the three options are "work on multiple computers, travel frequently, or need..." Wait, each of these is a phrase, but the user might want to split the three actions into three options. However, each is a separate action: perhaps "carry their browser and settings with them wherever they go, without having to install anything on the host computer. Portable Chrome is ideal for users who work on multiple computers, travel frequently, or need to use a public computer without leaving any personal data behind." Here, the three options are "work on multiple computers, travel frequently, or need..." So maybe those three phrases can be combined into travel frequently? But that seems too long. Maybe the user wants the verbs: work, travel, need. But "work on multiple computers" is the full phrase. Perhaps just the main verbs:workto use a public computer. Hmm, but the user might not specify; the example given uses "speed, security, and versatility" as three terms. So the pattern is when there are three noun phrases separated by commas and "and/or". So I'll replace the three noun phrases with travel frequently. But maybe that's too long. Alternatively, maybe the user expects only single words. Let me check the example in the user's instruction. They said "change all terms with 3 options as word2". So if there are three separate terms, each as a single word, then replace. In the given text, the three options are in the phrase "speed, security, and versatility" – three single words. Similarly, in the next part, "work on multiple computers, travel frequently, or need..." – these are three separate actions, longer phrases. But the user might expect them to be treated as such. But the user also said "Don't touch proper nouns." Proper nouns are like Google Chrome, Chrome OS, etc. So I need to ensure that if any proper nouns are in the three options, they stay unchanged.
In the sync support bullet: "Sync support: Users can sync their bookmarks, history, and other data across devices using their Google account." The verb here is "sync." Options might be "synchronize|sync|coordinate." Wait, "sync" is already there, but maybe "synchronize|align|unify"?
