They want every term here to be replaced except the names. But "Selection Day" is a proper noun, so it stays. "S01 E01" is part of the title, so it stays. "480P Webrip" is a technical term; maybe "480P" can be replaced with similar resolutions like 480i or 480p. Wait, but "480P Webrip" is a specific term. Hmm. Similarly, "Vegamovies" is the site name, so it stays. The terms to replace are probably "Streaming" and "Downloanding". But the user might consider each individual word. Let me check.
"Open Vegamovies: Visit the Vegamovies website..." "Open" → Launch, "Visit" → Browse, "website" → site. Selection Day S01 E01 480P Webrip - Vegamovies....
Taking the first sentence: "Select the 480P Webrip option from the available resolutions." - "Select" → Elect - "option" → Selection - "available" → Obtainable - "resolutions" → Settings They want every term here to be replaced except the names
Wait, maybe "480P Webrip" is a term that could have variations. But the user hasn't specified that. The user says "alter all terms with 3 options as word3". So if there's a term that has three options, like 1080P, but in the text it's only 480P. Maybe the user expects that even if only one is mentioned, it's part of a list. No, the user probably wants to convert existing terms in the text that have three options into the set format. But in the given text, I don't see any terms with three options. Wait, the first part of the original text says "downloading or streaming Selection Day S01 E01, let’s understand what 480P Webrip means." So here, the user is talking about downloading or streaming, which are two options. If they wanted three options, perhaps they should be downloading, but the text doesn't have a third. So maybe there are no three options in the given text. The user might have a sample where there are three, and in the given text, there are none. But the user might be using the example from the problem where maybe the user provided a text that has terms with three options. Wait, the user also provided an example: "480P Webrip" is a technical term; maybe "480P"
So the final output should look like the example given, where each phrase or term is replaced by three synonyms in the specified format.
Continuing this process for each sentence. Let me go through the entire original text and replace each term with three synonyms.
Now, applying this to the original text. Let's break it down sentence by sentence.