Wait, but "The" at the beginning should stay as a proper article? Wait, no, "The" is an article, which is a function word. Do the user want to replace function words? The instruction says "modify every term," but maybe "term" refers to content words: nouns, verbs, adjectives. So maybe function words like articles, prepositions, auxiliary verbs are left as is. But the user didn't specify. Hmm. If the original instruction is to change every term, maybe all words except proper nouns. But function words might not have enough variation. For example, "The" could be "The|That|A", but "A" changes the meaning. Maybe the user wants only content words modified. I need to make that assumption unless specified otherwise. Let me clarify mentally: replace all common nouns, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs with three variants, but keep proper nouns and possibly function words unchanged. That makes more sense because replacing function words could alter the sentence structure or meaning in unintended ways.

Another thing to consider is parts of speech. If the term is a verb, like "run," the variants could be "dash|sprint|run rapidly". But I have to make sure the number and tense match the original sentence. Also, some words might have limited synonyms, so I need to think of the best possible options.

Also, for verbs, past, present, future tense might differ. For example, "ran" vs "runs" vs "run" but the user didn't specify, so just provide three options regardless of tense. But maybe the example uses present tense, so stick to that.

The user says "modify every term with 3 variants" but "No changes to proper nouns." So "term" likely refers to each word except proper nouns. Thus, all words except proper nouns are modified. However, verbs, adjectives, nouns, etc., would be modified.