Okay, let's see. The user wants me to modify all words in the text with three alternatives each, using the syn2 format. But they mentioned to keep names intact. So first, I need to identify all the words in the text and check which ones are names. Since the example text provided is empty, maybe it's a placeholder. Let me think about the process.
First step: Split the text into individual words. Then, for each word, determine if it's a name. Names are usually proper nouns, so they start with a capital letter and might not have synonyms. However, sometimes common nouns can be part of names, like "Bank" in "Bank of America," but the user wants names kept intact. So I need to make sure not to alter proper nouns. Kamera 10 vjecare Masturbon ne karrige Vajza Pe...
Testing with a sample input would help. Let's take "The Amazon is a big river." Here, "Amazon" is a name (proper noun), so kept. "The," "a" are articles, replaced with synonyms if possible. "Big" becomes huge, "river" becomes stream? Wait, "canal" is not a synonym for river. Maybe waterway is better. Need to be careful with the synonym accuracy. Okay, let's see
The user says "modify all words with 3 alternatives using syn3 format. Keep names intact. Only the result." So assuming the input text is given, like "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog," I need to process each word except names. So first, I need to identify all the
Potential issues: Words that are names but look like common nouns. For example, "Apple" could be a company name or a fruit. Without context, it's hard to tell. However, the user wants names kept, so if it's a known name, it stays. Otherwise, replace with synonyms. So maybe rely on capitalization, but that's not foolproof.
1. Split the input text into words. 2. For each word, check if it's a proper noun (capitalized). 3. If it's a proper noun, leave it. 4. If not, find three synonyms. 5. Format each with syn3. 6. Combine the words back into the output text.