Proper nouns here are "The Phone Story," "Taptus," and "BEST." These should remain unchanged. Words like "powerful," "reminder," "complex," "disturbing journey" can be considered.
First sentence: "Try to extend the life of your device by repairing it, rather than replacing it."
Next sentence: "In a world where smartphones have become an integral part of our daily lives, it's easy to overlook the complex and often disturbing journey that these devices take from conception to disposal." The word "In" could be In. "a" could be a. "world" might be realm. But I need to check each word carefully. Phone Story -v0.3- -Taptus- BEST
But the user's instruction is to leave names unchanged. If "The Environmental Impact" is considered a name, it should stay. However, if it's just a section heading and not a brand, then it's a regular term. The user's ambiguity here is a challenge. Given that in the previous example, titles like "The Birth of a Phone" were included and altered, perhaps the user wants all words altered except for any specific brand names. Since there are no brand names here, even the section title should be altered. However, the instruction says to leave names unchanged. If "The Environmental Impact" is a section title, maybe it's considered a name. But the user didn't specify any brand names, so it's safer to alter all terms except brand names, and since there are none, alter all. Therefore, the section title would be spintaxed as well.
And so on for each segment. The challenge here is to apply this consistently throughout the text. Also, some phrases might be better left as is if replacing them would make the text awkward. For example, "BEST" in the title is probably an abbreviation or part of the app's name, so it should stay as is. Proper nouns here are "The Phone Story," "Taptus," and "BEST
Continuing this for each sentence. Now, the user also mentioned not to touch proper nouns. Proper nouns are names of specific things. In the text, maybe "smartphones" is not a proper noun, so replace it. But maybe terms like "rare earth minerals" are proper nouns? No, they're common. So replace all except if they're proper nouns, like a specific name of a brand or place. But there are none in the text. So proceed.
1. Identify each word in the original text (except brand names like Phone Story, Taptus) that can be replaced with three synonyms. 2. For each such word, find three synonyms. 3. Replace the original word with synonym3. "a" could be a
Also, "average" might be replaced with "typical|average|normal".