- Are →Do- you →one- a →the- student →student- of →within- engineering →technical- or →or- a →the- related →associated- field →domain- struggling →wrestling- to →to- find →discover- reliable →reliable- resources →sources- for →regarding- Applied Mathematics 1 → [keep as is]

Deepened comprehension: Using studying the responses, they shall achieve an advanced knowledge concerning numerical ideas plus skills. Problem-solving abilities: That answers illustrate

I need to check each word individually, ensuring each has three synonyms. Also, make sure that the names like G.V. Kumbhojkar stay unchanged. No markdown, just plain text with opt1 for each word. Let me go through each word again to confirm I didn't miss any. Also, avoid using the same word as an option if it's in the original unless it's a proper noun.

Let me start by processing each sentence. Let's take the first paragraph. The words that can be replaced:

Wait, in the original text, "Study groups: Join study groups or online forums..." So "study groups" is used twice. Do I need to revise both? The user says "revise each word", so yes. So "Study" in "Study groups" could be "Academic|Learning|Educational" and "groups" as before.

First, I need to go through each word in the text and think of three synonyms or variants. For example, the first sentence: "Are you a student of engineering or a related field, struggling to find reliable resources for Applied Mathematics 1?" The word "Are" can be "Do|Have|Are", "you" is probably kept as is since it's a pronoun. Wait, but the user said to skip names and brands. Applied Mathematics 1 is a specific title, so that should stay. Wait, but the user said to replace every word with three variants. Hmm, maybe they meant to keep proper nouns as they are? The instruction says to skip brands and names, so Applied Mathematics 1 is a title, so it should remain. But in the original text, the user included "G.V. Kumbhojkar" as a name, so that's a brand/name. So in the replacement, I should leave that as is.

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