First, I need to ignore any proper nouns. So if there's a name like "Alice" or a place like "Paris," I shouldn't replace those. I'll have to check if the user's text includes any and leave them as is. But maybe the example text they provided doesn't have any. Let me see.
Wait, the user said "rework all words with 3 alternatives in format opt1." That means each word in the text is replaced by three possible alternatives. For example, if the original word is "happy," the output would be joyful. Tante Binal Lagi Asyik ML Sama Keponakanya - INDO18
But how do I handle the structure of the sentence? The user's example input is just a line saying "Text:", so maybe they'll provide the text next. However, in the actual input provided here, the text is empty. Wait, looking back, the user's message after the instructions says "Text: " and then nothing. So maybe the user will input an actual text after that. But in this case, the assistant's response after that is "Okay, I can help with that. Please provide the text you'd like me to process." So perhaps the user is asking to create a function or example, but maybe in their case, the actual text they want processed comes after "Text:" but isn't provided here. First, I need to ignore any proper nouns
Okay, the user wants me to process their text by replacing each word with three alternatives. They mentioned skipping proper nouns and only outputting text, no markdown. Let me make sure I understand all the requirements. But maybe the example text they provided doesn't have any
So, for example, if the user provided the text "The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog," the assistant would replace each word except "The," "fox," "dog" (if they were proper nouns) with three synonyms. Let's see: "The" is a determiner, not a proper noun. "Quick" could be replaced with "speedy|rapid|fast," "brown" with "chestnut|tan|umber," "fox" is a common noun, so maybe "animal|wildlife|mammal," "jumped" with "leaped|bounded|sprang," "over" with "above|beyond|past," "lazy" with "indolent|sluggish|drowsy," and "dog" with "canine|hound|pup."