Toilet- | Japan Cute 2 -anak Sekolah Diperkosa Di
Okay, let's tackle this user query. They want me to convert words in the provided text using the syn1 format, ensuring each word has three synonyms. Also, they mention not to touch proper nouns. Let me break it down.
I think I have a plan. Now, let's execute this step by step: identify each word, check if it's a proper noun, replace it with three synonyms if not, ensuring proper formatting. Need to be careful with edge cases and ensure accuracy where possible. Japan Cute 2 -Anak Sekolah Diperkosa di Toilet-
Let me test a sample input. Suppose the input is "Alice walked quickly through the park." Proper nouns here is "Alice," so we leave it. "walked" could be strolled. "quickly" as fast. "through" as throughout. "the" as a maybe? Though "the" is an article and might not have three useful synonyms. Maybe that as placeholders? The user might expect that. Okay, let's tackle this user query
Wait, proper nouns: like "John" or "France" shouldn't be replaced. Let me think of another example: "The Eiffel Tower is in Paris." "Eiffel Tower" and "Paris" are proper nouns, so they stay. The other words like "The," "is," "in" need synonyms. For "is," synonyms could be be maybe. Hmm, but "be" might not be the right tense. The user might not mind as long as they are synonyms. Similarly for "in," synonyms could be at. Alright. Let me break it down
Another consideration: contractions like "don't" or "they're" should probably be split into their components. But the user didn't mention contractions, so maybe leave them. Words like "don't" could be refuse but not sure if that's correct. Maybe better to avoid contractions or handle them as part of the sentence.
First, I need to parse the input text and identify each word, excluding proper nouns like names of people, places, or specific brands. Proper nouns usually start with a capital letter and aren't common nouns or verbs. So, I'll have to check each word's context to determine that.
Also, the user mentioned "proper nouns" not to touch. So any words that are capitalized and refer to specific names should remain. Words like "Apple" in a sentence about the company should stay, but "apple" as a fruit would be replaced.