Given that, perhaps the correct approach is to replace every word with three variants, even names, but the instruction says to keep names intact. Therefore, the example provided by the user might have a mistake. But perhaps the user is confused, and the actual task is to replace all words with three variants regardless of being names. Alternatively, the instruction says to keep names intact, so names should not be altered, but other words should get variants. So, in the given example, "Hello" and "there" are common words, so they get variants, while "Alice" remains. But the user's example shows all words being replaced, which is conflicting.
Possibly, the user made a mistake in their example. Let me re-examine the instructions. They wrote: "every word with 3 variants in b format. Keep names intact. Only the result." So perhaps the example had some formatting issues. The user probably wants to replace every word except names with three variants. But in the example, "Hello" and "there" are common words, so they should have variants. Names like "Alice" should remain as is. But in the example, "Alice" was replaced with a, which is incorrect. So maybe the user intended that all words are replaced except names. But the example is confusing.
To clarify, let's proceed under the assumption that all words should have variants except the names. If the input is "Hello there, Alice," then "Hello" and "there" are common words, so they get replaced. "Alice" is a name, so it remains. However, if the user's example is correct and shows that even "Alice" is being replaced, then the instruction "keep names intact" might not apply. Maybe the user intended to replace every word, names included, but the format is b, using similar-looking characters for each letter.
Alright, let's tackle this query. The user wants every word in the provided text to have three variants using the format b, while keeping the original names intact. They only want the result, no explanations.
Given that, perhaps the correct approach is to replace every word with three variants, even names, but the instruction says to keep names intact. Therefore, the example provided by the user might have a mistake. But perhaps the user is confused, and the actual task is to replace all words with three variants regardless of being names. Alternatively, the instruction says to keep names intact, so names should not be altered, but other words should get variants. So, in the given example, "Hello" and "there" are common words, so they get variants, while "Alice" remains. But the user's example shows all words being replaced, which is conflicting.
Possibly, the user made a mistake in their example. Let me re-examine the instructions. They wrote: "every word with 3 variants in b format. Keep names intact. Only the result." So perhaps the example had some formatting issues. The user probably wants to replace every word except names with three variants. But in the example, "Hello" and "there" are common words, so they should have variants. Names like "Alice" should remain as is. But in the example, "Alice" was replaced with a, which is incorrect. So maybe the user intended that all words are replaced except names. But the example is confusing. SS Lisa- colegiala de 12 anos- Mp4 txt
To clarify, let's proceed under the assumption that all words should have variants except the names. If the input is "Hello there, Alice," then "Hello" and "there" are common words, so they get replaced. "Alice" is a name, so it remains. However, if the user's example is correct and shows that even "Alice" is being replaced, then the instruction "keep names intact" might not apply. Maybe the user intended to replace every word, names included, but the format is b, using similar-looking characters for each letter. Given that, perhaps the correct approach is to
Alright, let's tackle this query. The user wants every word in the provided text to have three variants using the format b, while keeping the original names intact. They only want the result, no explanations. Alternatively, the instruction says to keep names intact,