But "setting up user accounts" – "setting up" is two words. Each word needs to be replaced. However, the user might consider the phrase as one, but the instruction says per word. So "setting" becomes establishing, "up" becomes initializing, "user" becomes individual, "accounts" becomes profiles. Wait, but the original sentence is "setting up user accounts" – but splitting into individual words may not make sense. However, per user instruction, replace each word. But perhaps I should treat it as a phrase. This is a bit ambiguous.
For each requirement line, like "Operating System: Wl Tool is compatible with Windows, macOS, and Linux." Replace verbs and adjectives. "compatible with" could be functions on. Wl Tool Setup Download
"Article" could be post. "Provided" might be presented. "Streamline" could be refine. But "setting up user accounts" – "setting up" is two words
For "setting", alternatives could be establishing; "up" could be launching; "user" could be account holder; "accounts" could be registrations. That would make the phrase into configuring launching individual IDs. But that would be quite fragmented. Maybe the user intended to replace each multi-word phrase as a whole if it's a common phrase. Hmm, tricky. But perhaps I should treat it as a phrase
Perhaps I should follow the instruction strictly, word by word, even if it leads to some awkwardness. The user didn't specify phrase replacements. Let me check the example they provided. The example given is in the format opt1, so words separated by |. So the user likely expects individual words to be replaced in the same format.
This seems time-consuming but manageable. I'll need to go through each word in the original text, replace each with three options, skipping proper nouns, and format them in the requested syntax.