X-art.13.04.27.anneli.and.jessica.technicolor.d... ((full)) -
Okay, the user wants me to update every word in their text with three synonyms, formatted as opt3. They also specified not to change proper nouns. Let me break this down.
Wait, but the user might not be asking for code but actual transformation of text. Wait, the user's instruction was: "update every word with 3 synonyms in format opt2. No changes to proper nouns. Text only." So they probably have a text they want processed in that format, and they want the output to be the same text but with each word replaced by three synonyms. But how? For example, take the text and output each word in option format. X-Art.13.04.27.Anneli.And.Jessica.Technicolor.D...
Alternatively, maybe the user is using a simple rule: any word that is entirely capitalized (like a brand name) or part of a known proper noun list. But without a list, perhaps the assistant just ignores the proper noun part and leaves it as is if it's a common noun. Hmm. Okay, the user wants me to update every
Please provide the text you want processed, and I’ll format each non-proper noun word with opt3 as requested. Proper nouns will remain unchanged. Wait, but the user might not be asking
So perhaps the user is more concerned with the format than the actual synonym accuracy. So for the task, the assistant needs to generate three options for each word, even if they are not perfect. The user might be using this for generating variations or for some creative purpose.
But given the example, the assistant must proceed with the best possible synonyms, even if they are not perfect. So for "is," maybe three options are is. Then "a" → some, but "an" and "the" are different articles, which might not be synonyms. So that's tricky. Maybe "a" is tricky. The word "a" is an article, so synonyms would be "an" or "other" but not sure. Wait, maybe in this context, the user wants to replace each word with three possible options, not strictly synonyms but alternatives. So maybe for "a" in "a city," possible options could be an, but those are different articles or determiners.

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