18 Yasli Azeri Qehbe Qiz Nomreleri Hanferr

In that case, perhaps the best approach is to respond with a sample output showing the format. However, since the user said "Result only," I need to ensure that the output is just the modified text. Let me proceed with an example, assuming hypothetical input. Let's say the input is "The cat sat on the mat." Then, the output would be "The cat sat on the couch." But since the user wants names unchanged, if the cat was named "Whiskers," it would stay. But in this example, "cat" is a common noun. However, if the input was "Whiskers sat on the mat," then the output should be "Whiskers perched on the couch."

But since the user hasn't provided specific input, maybe they want me to generate an example? Wait, no, in the initial message, they said "modify words as...", but then provided no input. Wait, looking back at the user's query: "modify words as word3. each word with 3 options. Leave names unchanged. Result only." Oh, maybe they want me to process their previous input, but in the conversation history, there's no input given. So perhaps they're asking for an example? Hmm. 18 Yasli Azeri Qehbe Qiz Nomreleri hanferr

Given the ambiguity, I'll proceed by creating an example where I replace each word with three options, leaving any proper nouns as they are. Then present the result in the required format. In that case, perhaps the best approach is

The user wrote: "modify words as word1. each word with 3 options. Leave names unchanged. Result only." So maybe they are testing me. Let me create a hypothetical example. Suppose the input is a sentence: "John loves eating pizza." The names (John) stay, and the words "loves", "eating", "pizza" are replaced. So the result would be "John adores consuming pie." Let's say the input is "The cat sat on the mat

But wait, the user said "Leave names unchanged". So, I need to identify which words are names. Names could be proper nouns like person names, places, etc. But how do I know which words are names? The user might not specify, so maybe I should assume that any word that's a proper noun stays as is. However, without a specific list, this could be tricky. Maybe in the example they provided earlier, I can just replace normal nouns, verbs, adjectives with synonyms, but leave any proper nouns (like names) as they are.

Wait, maybe the user expects that when they provide some text, I should process it. But since they haven't given any text here, perhaps they want a sample response. Let me check the instructions again.

But since the user hasn't provided an input, perhaps they want a generic example. Alternatively, the user might be asking how to do this, but the way the query is phrased sounds like they want the assistant to generate the modified text based on some input. However, since the input is missing, maybe the user intended to provide it elsewhere. But in the current query, there's no text. Maybe the user is referring to the previous conversation, but if this is a standalone query, there's no context.