Starting with the first sentence: "The Suspects and Motives." "Suspects" is a proper noun part of the title, so it stays. "Motives" can be replaced with synonyms like causes . Wait, but "impetus" is a more common synonym. Let me check the standard thesaurus. Yes, "causes, reasons, and impetuses" might be acceptable, but I need to ensure they fit. "Impetuses" is plural of "impetus," which is correct.
First, I'll need to go through each sentence carefully. Proper nouns like "Suspects," "Conan," "Mrs. Kuroba," "Mr. Matsumoto," "Ms. Inoue," "The Truth Revealed," "Mr. Kuroba," etc., should be left as they are. The user emphasized not to touch proper nouns, so I have to be strict about that. Detective Conan Episode 626
First, I'll go through the text word by word. For each term, I need to think of three synonyms or alternatives. Words like "popular" could be "acclaimed", "well-known", "renowned". "Japanese" could stay as "Japanese" but maybe "Japanese anime series" is a term. Wait, the user said to change every term, so each individual word or phrase? Wait, maybe they mean every word, except names. Let me clarify. Starting with the first sentence: "The Suspects and Motives
Okay, I need to help the user rework the provided text by replacing each word with three synonyms using the c format. The user mentioned not to touch proper nouns, so I'll make sure to leave names like Conan, Mr. Kuroba, Akira Kamiya, etc., unchanged. Let me check the standard thesaurus
"Mr. Matsumoto, a business rival of the victim;" "rival" as adversary , "victim" as deceased if it's a murder case.
Moving on to the next sentence: "The host, Mr. Kuroba, seems nervous and on edge, and the other attendees appear to be hiding secrets of their own." "Host" → event planner, "seems" → look, but maybe shows signs of, "nervous" → uneasy, "on edge" → on tenterhooks, "other attendees" → rest of the guests, "appear" → look, "hiding" → concealing, "secrets" → secrets, "of their own" → from them themselves.