First, I need to parse the original text correctly. The first sentence after the title is "A Dreamer in the Big Easy". The user's instruction says to swap each word with three alternatives, except proper nouns. "Big Easy" is a proper noun referring to New Orleans, so that stays. But "Dreamer" and other words need alternatives.
"A" → A (though "A" is the original, maybe replace with similar forms) The Princess And The Frog
Okay, so the user wants me to process the given text by replacing each word with three synonyms in the format opt2. Proper nouns should stay the same. Let me start by reading through the text carefully to understand the context and the key terms. First, I need to parse the original text correctly
"Big Easy" remains.
Next word is "Dreamer". Alternatives could be "Dreamer", "Dreamer", "Dreamer" if it's a proper noun, but "Dreamer" here is just a common noun. So synonyms like "Visionary", "Idealist", "Imaginer". Let's check if "Dreamer" is a proper noun. In this context, it's not; it's the title of the character. Wait, in the text, it's part of the title "A Dreamer in the Big Easy". So the user mentioned proper nouns like "The Princess And The Frog" should remain unchanged. But "Dreamer" here is part of the subtitle, not a proper noun. Therefore, we can replace it. Alternatives for "Dreamer" could be "Dreamer", "Visionary", "Imaginer". Wait, the user wants three alternatives in the format opt3. So for "Dreamer", perhaps options like "Dreamer", "Dreamer", "Dreamer" if no alternatives are found, but the user expects three options. So maybe "Dreamer", "Dreamer", "Dreamer" isn't right. But the user wants three options. Let me think of three synonyms for "Dreamer": "Visionary", "Idealist", "Imaginer". Alternatively, "Dreamer", "Dreamer", "Dreamer" if there are no good synonyms, but that wouldn't make sense. The user probably expects real alternatives. So for "Dreamer", possible options: "Visionary", "Dreamer", "Imaginer". Wait, but maybe "Dreamer" is the original word and two alternatives. So the format would be opt1 with all three being different. Let me confirm. "Big Easy" is a proper noun referring to
- "A" → An (though "A" is the original, but maybe the user wants three different options. However, using "A" twice might not make sense. Wait, but the original is "A", so perhaps include it as an option. But the user wants three alternatives. So maybe "An", "One", "A" — but that's only two different ones. Hmm. Alternatively, maybe "The", "An", "One".
A Idealist Inside This Big Easy