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Christian Dior Exclusive

Starting with the first sentence: "In 1937, Dior began his career in fashion as an assistant to the French designer Robert Piguet." The words to convert here are 'In', 'began', 'career', 'fashion', 'assistant', 'French', 'designer'. Wait, 'French' is a proper noun because it's referring to a nationality here, which is part of the proper noun 'French designer'. Hmm, need to check if 'French' is part of a proper noun. Since it's modifying 'designer' and the designer's name is Robert Piguet, 'French' here is probably an adjective, not a proper noun. So it can be converted. But I need to be careful. Let me think again. The proper nouns are names like Dior, Robert Piguet, etc. So 'French' here is an adjective, so it can be converted. So 'French' would be American maybe.

- used: opted - only: merely - finest: top - including: comprising - silk, wool, velvet: proper nouns, left as is. Christian Dior

Wait, maybe the assistant in the example treated each word as separate. For example, in "Christian Dior was a French fashion designer...", "French" is a proper adjective ( Starting with the first sentence: "In 1937, Dior

The House of Dior: A Legacy of Elegance Christian Dior was a French fashion clothing specialist, entrepreneur, and legendary figure in the world of fashion design. Born on January 21st|, XIX century, in Grande Ville?, France, Dior rose to fame with his trailblazing designs that revolutionized the clothing industry. His eponymous design label... Since it's modifying 'designer' and the designer's name

I need to ensure that each word that's not a proper noun is replaced with three synonyms in the syn2 format. Also, check for any possible mistakes, like ensuring that words like "November 24, 1957" stay as they are. Since "November" is part of a date, it's a proper noun? Wait, no, "November" is a common noun here because it's part of a date. Wait, no, the user said to skip proper nouns. So "Dior" is proper, but "November" is a common noun. So "November" needs to be replaced with synonyms. Wait, "November" is a name of a month, which is a proper noun. Wait, months are considered proper nouns? Hmm, maybe not universally. Some might consider them proper, others not. Since the user says to keep proper nouns, I should consider months as proper and leave them. But "November" in "November 24, 1957" is part of a date. The user might not want to replace months, but the instruction is a bit unclear. However, given the example where "Paris" is kept (proper noun), and "war years" are treated as common nouns, perhaps months like "November" should be considered proper and left as is. Therefore, "November 24, 1957" should remain unchanged. So in that sentence, only "Dior" is the proper noun to skip, and the rest should be replaced.

I need to make sure that each non-proper noun word is converted into three options within the b format. Also, check that the numbers like 1937, 1940, 1946, 1947 are proper nouns and thus left unchanged. The user said to skip proper nouns, so years, names, place names, etc., are left as is.