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Wait, maybe the user is testing the system to see if I can handle such a query. They might not have included the actual text yet, but they want me to process it once it's provided. Since the example in the history shows a similar scenario where the assistant replied with the result only, I should follow that structure.
"Hello", ",", "my", "name", "is", "John", "." Novinha na cam se masturbando
Processing each word:
But wait, in the example response, the assistant replaced "John" with syn... which might have been an error. So I need to avoid that. Therefore, in my processing, I'll check if a word is capitalized. If it is, leave it. Otherwise, process it. For example, in "Hello, my name is John.", "Hello" is capitalized, so perhaps part of the greeting and not a name. Wait, but "Hello" is a greeting, not a name. So the capitalization check isn't sufficient. Hmm, this is a problem. How to differentiate between words that are names and those that are not. Wait, maybe the user is testing the system
I should check if the example in the history used a specific format. Looking back, when the user provided "Text: Hello, my name is John." the response was "Hellosyn3, mysyn3 namesyn3 issyn2 Johnsyn3." But that seems off because "John" is a name and should remain unchanged. Wait, maybe the assistant made a mistake there. Hmm. The user's instruction says to leave names unchanged, but in the example, "John" was replaced with synonyms. That might be an error. So I need to be careful not to replace names. "Hello", ",", "my", "name", "is", "John", "
But how to handle this in practice? Maybe the user wants all words except specific names (like proper nouns) to be replaced. However, since the text might not provide context to determine which words are names, unless they are capitalized. So, perhaps any capitalized word (assuming it's a proper noun) is left as is. Lower-case words are replaced with synonyms. However, some words like "my" are lowercase and not names. So the approach is: for each word, if it's not a proper noun (i.e., not capitalized), replace it with three synonyms. So "John" is capitalized, assumed to be a name, left as is. "my", "name", etc., are replaced.