Meyd-718 Bercinta Cepat Dengan Janda Sebelah Rumah Riho Fujimori - Indo18 ❲VALIDATED · METHOD❳

Alternatively, maybe the entire email address is treated as a single entity, so each part isn't considered a separate word. The same goes for the address: "123 Main St, Anytown, USA 12345" should be kept as it is because it's an address, and each component is a proper name or location.

But then there are other words. Let's take "Hello, world!" as the example text. "Hello" should be converted to three variants. Let's think: possible synonyms for "hello" are "hi," "greetings," "hey." So it would become hi. Similarly, "world" could be replaced with "universe," "earth," or "planet." So earth. Alternatively, maybe the entire email address is treated

hey earth

Wait, but the user said "convert every word with 3 variants formatted v3." So each word in the input text (excluding names) needs to be replaced by three possible variants. The challenge is identifying which words are names and which are regular words. Without specific context, it's hard to know. If the input text includes words that could be either names or common nouns, I might have to default to treating them as regular words unless they fit a pattern of names (like capitalized words, domains, addresses, etc.). Let's take "Hello, world

I need to make sure that in the output, only the result is presented, without any additional text or explanation. The user wants the final converted text directly. keeping names as they are. So

1. Split the input text into words or tokens. 2. For each token, determine if it's a name (email, address, URL, capitalized proper nouns) or a regular word. 3. For regular words, generate three synonyms or variants. 4. For names, leave them unchanged. 5. Format the output with v1 for each regular word, keeping names as they are.

So, the approach would be: