Breaking that down, "Open" can be replaced with synonyms like "Launch", "Begin", "Start". "the" is an article, but maybe a determiner, but the user might want to keep it. Wait, the user says "swap each word", but "the" is an article. Hmm, maybe they want every word except proper nouns. So articles and prepositions too? Let me check the example they provided. The user's example shows replacing "Open" with synonyms, so yes, every word except proper nouns.

I need to be careful with words like "directory" in technical contexts; maybe folder works. Words like "machine" can be system.

Alternatively, maybe the user made a mistake in the example and only wants content words (nouns, verbs, adjectives) changed. Let me check the example again. The example shows "Open the listener.ora file in a text editor and add the following lines:" being replaced as "Launch... this listener.ora document in a written manuscript and append these subsequent lines:". Wait, the example from the user shows replacing "file" with "document", "in a text editor" with "in a written manuscript", and "add" with "append". So articles and prepositions like "in" are kept as is? Wait, in the example, "the listener.ora file" becomes "this listener.ora document", so "the" is replaced with "this", "file" with "document". "in a text editor" becomes "in a written manuscript". The preposition "in" remains. So the instruction is to replace every word with three options, including articles and prepositions, but proper nouns are left.

Next, I'll go step by step through each line. For instance, "Open the listener.ora file in a text editor and add the following lines:"

However, the user's example includes "ADDRESS = (PROTOCOL = TCP)(HOST = your_host_name)(PORT = 1521)) ) ) )", where "your_host_name" is a proper noun. So in that case, the rest of the parameters like PROTOCOL, HOST, PORT remain unchanged.

I'll start sentence by sentence, breaking down each part. For instance, the first sentence mentions "navigate to the extracted directory and double-click on the “setup.exe” file..." Here, "navigate to" can be a triplet, "extracted" can be another, but "setup.exe" stays as is.

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Breaking that down, "Open" can be replaced with synonyms like "Launch", "Begin", "Start". "the" is an article, but maybe a determiner, but the user might want to keep it. Wait, the user says "swap each word", but "the" is an article. Hmm, maybe they want every word except proper nouns. So articles and prepositions too? Let me check the example they provided. The user's example shows replacing "Open" with synonyms, so yes, every word except proper nouns.

I need to be careful with words like "directory" in technical contexts; maybe folder works. Words like "machine" can be system. Download Oracle Client 11G 64 Bit For Windows 2008 R2

Alternatively, maybe the user made a mistake in the example and only wants content words (nouns, verbs, adjectives) changed. Let me check the example again. The example shows "Open the listener.ora file in a text editor and add the following lines:" being replaced as "Launch... this listener.ora document in a written manuscript and append these subsequent lines:". Wait, the example from the user shows replacing "file" with "document", "in a text editor" with "in a written manuscript", and "add" with "append". So articles and prepositions like "in" are kept as is? Wait, in the example, "the listener.ora file" becomes "this listener.ora document", so "the" is replaced with "this", "file" with "document". "in a text editor" becomes "in a written manuscript". The preposition "in" remains. So the instruction is to replace every word with three options, including articles and prepositions, but proper nouns are left. Breaking that down, "Open" can be replaced with

Next, I'll go step by step through each line. For instance, "Open the listener.ora file in a text editor and add the following lines:" Hmm, maybe they want every word except proper nouns

However, the user's example includes "ADDRESS = (PROTOCOL = TCP)(HOST = your_host_name)(PORT = 1521)) ) ) )", where "your_host_name" is a proper noun. So in that case, the rest of the parameters like PROTOCOL, HOST, PORT remain unchanged.

I'll start sentence by sentence, breaking down each part. For instance, the first sentence mentions "navigate to the extracted directory and double-click on the “setup.exe” file..." Here, "navigate to" can be a triplet, "extracted" can be another, but "setup.exe" stays as is.