Let me start with the first sentence:
Looking at the sample provided, the user's example shows that "The" becomes The, so they're using the same word as one of the options. That makes sense because sometimes you want to keep the original if alternatives are too different. So each word needs three options, even if they are the same. Let me start with the first sentence: Looking
But in the original text, "a popular 3D modeling...", "3D" is a common term here, so it's not a brand. So replace with options like "three-dimensional" or "triangular", but wait, the user is asking for synonym options. So "3D" → "three-dimensional|tri-dimentional|3D" (but maybe that's the same word, which is allowed as per the sample). So three-dimensional But in the original text, "a popular 3D modeling
- "Your" becomes The - "Maxon app" remains as is - "is" → has - "outdated" → old - "and" → yet - "installer" → setup tool - "requires" → demands - "a" → a - "newer" → newer - "version" → edition So three-dimensional - "Your" becomes The - "Maxon
So each word gets replaced with three options, even if one option is the same as the original. That's what the sample shows.
Continue this process for each word. For example, "while" → whilst.
Also, note that some words might not have three options, but the user probably expects three even if they're similar. So creative options might be needed.