Continuing with the rest of the text, replacing each word with three options, keeping track of which words are proper nouns and which are not. For example, "Sight-Reading" is bolded, but it's part of the exam section title, so perhaps it should be left as is? Wait, the user said "Don't touch proper nouns". Is "Sight-Reading" a proper noun here? Since it's the name of a section in the exam, maybe. But typically, titles aren't capitalized in all caps in that way in text, but the user included it as bolded. Alternatively, it's just a section title and not a proper noun. Probably better to replace each word in "Sight-Reading" as per instruction. "Sight-Reading" is two words connected by a hyphen, but in the text it's written as "Sight-Reading", so each part is a word. However, the user might consider "Sight-Reading" as a compound proper noun. If it's considered a proper noun (as a section title), then it stays. Otherwise, replace each part. This is ambiguous, but following the initial instruction, unless specified to exclude certain words, proceed to replace each individual word.
Wait, but "widely recognized" is a compound adjective. Should I replace the entire phrase or each word? The user said "each word with 3 options", so each individual word, not phrases. So "widely recognized" would be split into "widely" and "recognized", each with their own three options. Let me confirm that. fylm Hot Girls Wanted 2015 mtrjm - fasl alany
Continuing with the next sentence: "played in sixths and in thirds". Continuing with the rest of the text, replacing
Putting it all together, I need to ensure each word is replaced with three options, maintaining the original structure. Let me go through each part again to check for consistency and proper formatting. Is "Sight-Reading" a proper noun here