Organization section: "A single file with all episodes keeps your collection organized and easy to navigate."
apple Company is a hi-tech corporation.
So I need to go through each word and replace them with three options, unless they are proper nouns. Organization section: "A single file with all episodes
"Convenience: Having all episodes in a single PDF file makes it easy to access and watch the series offline."
"Respect copyright laws" could be "Honor|Adhere to|Follow", and "laws and regulations" might be "Laws|Guidelines|Rules". But how do I determine that without additional information
"Verify file integrity" can be "Check|Assess|Test", and "corruption or damage" becomes "Corruption|Damages|Defects".
Ah, the user might not have considered that edge case. So perhaps the rule is: only proper nouns are those that are actually proper, not just capitalized. But how do I determine that without additional information? It's a bit of a challenge. Maybe the user assumes that the provided text will only have proper nouns correctly capitalized, and the rest are not. So in processing, any word that is a proper noun (like names, places) will be left as is, even if other words are capitalized. So the user is responsible for ensuring that only the words they intend to be proper nouns are capitalized. Hmm, this is getting complicated. Spin-off series → derived
Spin-off series → derived