Mr Hot Mr Kool Hindi Dubbed — Hd Mp4 Movies -repack ((link))
"Search" can be replaced with "Look up | Find | Search", but "Search" is in the original, so maybe "Look up | Find | Locate". But since the user wants exactly three, I'll do that. The movie title should stay as is.
Given the ambiguity, perhaps the best approach is to generate three options for each relevant term in the text. However, without the user specifying which words to target, I need to make an educated guess. The word "HD MP4 format" is a likely candidate since it's technical and could have alternatives like AVI, MP3, etc., but MP4 is already a format. Wait, "HD MP4 format" — maybe replace "HD" with different quality levels or "MP4" with other codecs. But since the user might want three options for each part. Mr Hot Mr Kool Hindi Dubbed Hd Mp4 Movies -REPACK
Looking for b in here. The phrase "HD MP4 format" has b, but the user says to leave names unchanged. Wait, no, the actual placeholders might be within the text. Let me check again. "Search" can be replaced with "Look up |
"Plot revolves around two friends, Raj and Kumar, who fall in love with the same woman, leading to a series of comedic and dramatic events." "Revolve" becomes "center|focus|concentrate". "Lead to" can be "result in|produce|cause". "Comedic" to "humorous|joking|witty". "Dramatic" as "emotional|passionate|intense". Given the ambiguity, perhaps the best approach is
Okay, let me tackle this query. The user wants me to revise the given text, replacing the words in a format with three options each, without changing any names. The final result should only include the revised text.
In the original text provided by the user for the revision, they have "HD MP4 format" in the system requirements. The user's instruction says to replace words in b format. But in the example given, the user hasn't included c, but in their own example, maybe they inserted it. Wait, the user's query starts with "revise words in c format. each word with 3 options. Leave names unchanged. Result only." So the user expects that in their original text, certain words are marked with b format, and they want each of those words to have three options. However, looking at the original text they provided, I don't see any b in there. Maybe they made a mistake? Or perhaps the user intended to create their own example with c placeholders.
Then "Convenience: Downloading the movie in MP4 format allows users to watch it on various devices, including smartphones, tablets, and laptops." The key terms are "Convenience," "Downloading the movie in MP4 format," "users," and "various devices." Alternatives could be "Portability|Device Flexibility|Multi-Platform Accessibility" and "streaming the film in MP4 format|saving the movie in HD format|accessing the movie via MP4 compression."
