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Konten Mbak Ratu STW Paruh Baya Binal Sange-an - INDO18

Konten Mbak Ratu Stw Paruh Baya Binal Sange-an - Indo18 -

Wait, perhaps the user is referring to replacing each word with three synonyms, using the pipe symbol, and skipping any words that are proper nouns. So, the main challenge is to generate three synonyms for each word, while leaving proper nouns as they are.

Alternatively, maybe the user is asking to replace each word with three synonyms, regardless of being proper or not, but skip the proper nouns themselves. So if the input is "New York is a city," then "New York" is a proper noun, so we should leave it as is, while replacing "is," "a," "city." But "New York" is two words, so need to check each word in the input. Wait, the user's instruction says "Skip proper nouns," so any word that's a proper noun should not be rephrased. So for example, if the input is "Paris is a city," "Paris" is a proper noun and should be kept as is. The others: "is|are|am," "a|the|an," "city|town|metropolis." But how do I determine which words are proper nouns? Without a dictionary or some NLP processing, that's tricky. However, maybe the user is just expecting that we skip any word that is a proper noun, and replace the rest with three synonyms. So, assuming that the user provides a sentence where some words are proper nouns (like names, places), the task is to rephrase those non-proper words with three synonyms each. Konten Mbak Ratu STW Paruh Baya Binal Sange-an - INDO18

But how to generate the synonyms? The user might be using a thesaurus or similar tool. However, the example given in the user's mind might be: input word "happy," output happy. So each word is replaced by three synonyms. Now, if the input has "John is happy," the output should be "John is joyful" because "John" is a proper noun and should be skipped. Wait, perhaps the user is referring to replacing

But how to implement this without knowing the specific proper nouns in the input? Maybe the user expects that we just ignore any word that starts with a capital letter as a proper noun. But that's not always true; for example, "Cat" in a sentence could be a common noun but written with a capital letter for some reason. So if the input is "New York is

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