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In conclusion, the correct approach is to take the input text, find all instances of three items listed together (e.g., separated by commas or 'or's), and replace them with a, making sure that if the items are proper nouns, they remain as is. The user wants the processed text as output, without any extra text, just the modified version.

But the user instructed to "Only output text." So maybe I should assume an example scenario. However, given the current input, there's nothing to process. Alternatively, maybe this is part of a system test, and the user wants to ensure that the model can handle this task. naked yoga school

Let me test with a sample input. Suppose the input text was something like "The options are red, blue, green and the best city is New York, London, Tokyo." Then the output should be "The options are red and the best city is New York, London, Tokyo." Only the options list is modified. In conclusion, the correct approach is to take

- If a list of three terms (proper nouns or not) is present, replace with b format. - Proper nouns themselves should not be modified. So if a proper noun is part of a list, it remains as part of the options. However, given the current input, there's nothing to process

Alternatively, maybe they're referring to a previous interaction where there was a text. Since I don't have that context, I need to make sure I understand their request correctly. They want me to replace any terms that have three options with the c format. Proper nouns like "New York", "IBM", etc., should remain unchanged.

5. Mixed case with a proper noun in a three-item list: "Fruits: Apple, banana, kiwi." → "Fruits: Apple."

2. Input with three proper nouns in a list: "Cities to visit: New York, London, Tokyo." → "Cities to visit: Tokyo."