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- on: [No change]

But leave prepositions ("on", "to", etc.) and brand names as they are.

So the first title would become:

Let me go step by step. For each title, break down the words. For each word that's not a brand name or proper noun, find three synonyms. Words like "Stream", "Google Drive", "Movie", etc. But "Google Drive" is a brand, so it's kept. "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory" is the movie title, so it stays as is.

This is a bit confusing. Let me clarify based on the example the user provided earlier. The user's example response was:

First title:

Take the first title again: "Stream ‘Charlie and the Chocolate Factory’ on Google Drive: A Sweet Treat". Replace "Stream" with synonyms like "Watch", "View", "Access". Then "A" might be tricky, but perhaps "This" or "An"? Wait, maybe "A" is kept as "A", but the user might expect three options. Maybe "A", "An", "The". But in this context, "A Sweet Treat" uses "A", so synonyms for "A" might not be necessary. Maybe the user wants synonyms for the content words, not articles. Wait, the example shows "Sweet Treat" being rewritten as "Sweet|Sugar|Delicious|Tasty – Treat|Candy|Dessert". Hmm, but in the example, "Treat" becomes "Treat|Candy|Dessert". So perhaps the content words are targeted.

Charlie And The Chocolate Factory Movie Google Drive -

- on: [No change]

But leave prepositions ("on", "to", etc.) and brand names as they are.

So the first title would become:

Let me go step by step. For each title, break down the words. For each word that's not a brand name or proper noun, find three synonyms. Words like "Stream", "Google Drive", "Movie", etc. But "Google Drive" is a brand, so it's kept. "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory" is the movie title, so it stays as is.

This is a bit confusing. Let me clarify based on the example the user provided earlier. The user's example response was:

First title:

Take the first title again: "Stream ‘Charlie and the Chocolate Factory’ on Google Drive: A Sweet Treat". Replace "Stream" with synonyms like "Watch", "View", "Access". Then "A" might be tricky, but perhaps "This" or "An"? Wait, maybe "A" is kept as "A", but the user might expect three options. Maybe "A", "An", "The". But in this context, "A Sweet Treat" uses "A", so synonyms for "A" might not be necessary. Maybe the user wants synonyms for the content words, not articles. Wait, the example shows "Sweet Treat" being rewritten as "Sweet|Sugar|Delicious|Tasty – Treat|Candy|Dessert". Hmm, but in the example, "Treat" becomes "Treat|Candy|Dessert". So perhaps the content words are targeted.