Download- Nwdzat Bnt Msryh Fajrh Bmdfyn Bzaz.m... Upd
- "The" -> An, but wait, "The" is a proper noun? No, since it's lowercase except for the first word of the sentence. Wait, in English, sentences start with a capital letter. So "The" here is the first word of the sentence. But the user said to leave proper nouns untouched. Proper nouns are specific names, not articles. So "The" here is not a proper noun. So it should be replaced with synonyms. However, "the" is an article, which might not have many synonyms. So maybe the or similar.
Alright, let's tackle this query. The user wants every word in their text to be replaced with three synonyms, formatted as word3. They specified not to change proper nouns. First, I need to figure out how to process the input text. Download- nwdzat bnt msryh fajrh bmdfyn bzaz.m...
Processed Output: "Paragraph: Mornin', myself name is John. Nowadays, myself shall compose the article regarding synonyms and opposites utilizing a dictionario." - "The" -> An, but wait, "The" is a proper noun
Note: Proper nouns like "John" and "thesaurus" remain unchanged. Synonyms are approximated where direct equivalents are limited (e.g., "a" → an). So "The" here is the first word of the sentence
But wait, the user's instruction says "no changes to proper nouns". Proper nouns include names, places, titles, etc., but not articles, prepositions, common nouns, etc. So "The" is an article and should be replaced with synonyms like "The|A|An", but actually, in English, "the" doesn't have direct synonyms. "The" is a definite article, while "a/an" are indefinite. So replacing with synonyms might not make sense. However, the user's instruction is to replace every word with three synonyms unless it's a proper noun. So even if the synonyms don't make sense in context, we need to provide three options.
This could lead to incorrect substitutions, but perhaps the user wants all words transformed regardless of grammatical correctness. For example, replacing "the" with that, even though they are not true synonyms. But it's the best possible approach given the constraints.
Another thing to consider: punctuation. If a word has punctuation attached, like "John." with a period, do I split it into "John" and "."? If so, "John" is a proper noun and left alone, and the punctuation remains. But if it's within the word, like "don't", maybe split into "don't" or keep as "do|not|doesn't" (though that's a different word). Hmm, need to be careful with contractions and hyphenated words.