"Save money: Instead of purchasing a license, you can get all the benefits of Soundplant without spending a dime." Replace "Save," "purchasing," "benefits," "dime." "Save" could be retain. "Purchasing" might be obtaining. "Benefits" could be advantages. "Dime" is a proper noun (currency), so leave "dime" as is unless there's a slang term, but I think it's okay to have coin if allowed. Wait, but "dime" here is a proper noun? Maybe not. Hmm. The instruction says to skip proper nouns. "Dime" might be a common noun. But "MIDI" is a proper noun. Maybe "Save money: Instead of acquiring a license, you can get all the advantages of Soundplant without allocating a cent."
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So the process is: parse the text, for each term (word or phrase) that isn't a proper noun, replace it with x. Proper nouns stay the same. Terms here are individual words? Or phrases? For example, "audio enthusiast" is a term. Let me see the example the user provided in the query: the original text is "Soundplant Full Crack: Unlock Endless Audio Possibilities Are you an audio enthusiast..." and the assistant's answer replaces "audio enthusiast" as sound designer. So "audio enthusiast" is considered a single term. Then "audio" in "audio possibilities" is part of a phrase, but in the original text, "audio possibilities" is a term to replace. But maybe the user wants each individual term, meaning each word, except proper nouns. Wait, maybe the user wants each term (like "audio", "enthusiast", "powerful", etc.) to be replaced with three options. But in the example, "audio enthusiast" is replaced as a whole, possibly considering it as a term. But the example from the user shows that "audio enthusiast" becomes three options. So perhaps each term is a phrase, like in the original text, and the assistant should replace each such term with opts.
Proper nouns to leave as is: - Soundplant - Full - Crack (though Crack here is part of the software name, so maybe it's part of the proper noun) Wait, "Soundplant Full Crack" might be considered a proper noun. But "Full Crack" could be a specific version. The user says not to touch proper nouns. So we have to leave "Soundplant Full Crack" as is.
First, I need to parse the original text. Let's break it down sentence by sentence.
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Starting with the first line: "MIDI control: Control Soundplant with your MIDI keyboard or controller for seamless integration with your existing setup." The words to replace here might be "Control," "keyboard," "controller," "seamless," and "integration." Let me check each. "Control" could be direct. "Keyboard" might be board. "Controller" could be device. "Seamless" could be effortless. "Integration" might be joining.
Given the ambiguity, perhaps the best approach is to treat each individual word that is not part of a proper noun as a term to replace. For example, "audio" becomes acoustic, "enthusiast" becomes buff, etc. Proper nouns like "Soundplant", "Berkeley Square Software" remain unchanged.