The Caribbean 6 |verified| — The Pirates Of

Wait, maybe the user wants words that can have three different forms. For example, "can" could be shall, but "can" can also be "must" and "might," but that's three. However, the user specified to skip proper nouns, so names like "Johnny Depp" should be excluded. Let's go through the text.

The next section: "The Pirates of the Caribbean franchise has become a cultural phenomenon, with a loyal fan base that spans the globe. The series has grossed over $4.5 billion at the box office, making it one of the most successful film franchises of all time. The films have also spawned numerous spin-offs, including video games, theme park attractions, and merchandise."

Looking back at the original text provided by the user, the first text is: The Pirates Of The Caribbean 6

For example, "grossed" can be collected. "Phenomenon" might be trend. "Loyal" could be faithful. "Fan base" can be following. "Spans" could be extends. "Merchandise" might be products.

"Helm" might go to management. "Iconic" could be legendary. "Portrayal" might be representation. Wait, maybe the user wants words that can

Looking at the example text, let's see. Words like "franchise" could have alternatives like enterprise but I need to come up with three real alternatives for each word. Wait, but the user might not know about the b format and wants me to generate three synonyms for selected words. But the instruction isn't entirely clear. However, since the example uses text with some words and wants alternatives, perhaps the user expects me to go through each word, find if they have three possible forms, and list them in that format. But generating three valid alternatives for every word is tricky.

"franchise" → business "memorable" → unforgettable (Wait, three different ones. Maybe unforgettable) "characters" → figures "thrilling" → exciting? Hmm, maybe replace the third. stirring "action" → activity "sequences" → order "richly detailed" → elaborately crafted (But this is a phrase, not a single word. Hmm. Maybe need to split. Alternatively, maybe the phrase "richly detailed" can be considered. Maybe fully described. But this might be stretching.) Let's go through the text

Wait, the user said "all words," so perhaps only single words. So "richly" and "detailed" separately. But "richly detailed" is a phrase. Maybe split into their components. Let's see.