Vcd Karaoke -

I'm a bit confused. The user's example might be in the initial instruction. Let me look at the user's example. In the original text, there's a part that says "using VCD karaoke was relatively simple." The assistant rewrote it as "Using DVD karaoke was convenient." Wait, in the example, the user might have added options, but in the actual original text provided here, there's no VCD, CD, DVD. The user might have given a different example.

Wait, but the original term is "VCD karaoke". If the user wants to replace each word, then "VCD" as a word, but "VCD" is part of the term. However, if "karaoke" is a separate word, then maybe replace both. But the user instructions say to replace each word with 3 alternatives. So "VCD karaoke" is two words. Let me check: the original text is "VCD karaoke", but "VCD" might be considered a single word. Wait, it's "VCD" and "karaoke" are separate words. So I need to handle them individually. But the user might consider "VCD karaoke" as a single term. Hmm, this is tricky. Maybe I should treat them as separate. Let me check the user's example: The original text is "VCD karaoke may be a blast from the past...", and the user wants each word replaced. So if "VCD karaoke" is two words, each should be replaced. But "VCD" is a technical term. Maybe the user expects me to find alternatives for "VCD" instead of leaving it as is. So perhaps the user wants to spin the format as well. Let me try to find three synonyms for "VCD". Since it's a specific format, maybe alternatives like "Video Disc", "Compact Disc", "Legacy Disc", but that's not accurate. Alternatively, maybe terms that imply oldness or format: "Old-school video disc", "Classic disc", "Vintage video format". But perhaps the user is okay with just replacing the whole phrase as a term. Maybe I can say: Classic karaoke for "VCD karaoke". Then "may be": could be. "A blast": a nostalgic throwback. "From the past": from days of yore. vcd karaoke

Wait, maybe the phrase "popular hits to classic standards" can be three. The original text says "from popular hits to classic standards" – maybe the user wants to convert that into three, adding another option like "local tracks" or something. But the user says to keep brand names, not add new terms. I'm a bit confused

"Reminds of the power of music to bring people together": "serves as a reminder of music's ability to unite", "highlights the unifying force of music", "demonstrates how music connects people". In the original text, there's a part that

"Get ready to sing your heart out": "prepare to let out your soul in song", "get set to belt out every note", "ready to pour your emotions into every lyric".

Now, I need to format each term with three synonyms in the syn1 format, keeping the brand names (like VCD karaoke) unchanged. Also, ensure the text only part is returned without any markdown. Let me replace each identified term accordingly, checking for proper noun consistency and synonym accuracy. Double-check that no proper nouns are altered, and each term (except proper nouns) has three synonyms.

Continuing with the next sentences. The user wants the output in the same structure but with synonyms. I have to make sure that the synonyms are appropriate in context. For example, "stall" could be "pause|hault|halt" – maybe not. Let me check each word carefully.