Novinha Na Cam Se Masturbando Apr 2026
So, in my response, if there are names in the text, I should leave them as they are, without adding synonyms. Also, punctuation like commas and periods should stay in place but maybe not include the syn tags. For example, "Hello," should be "Hellosyn2," or is the comma part of the word? Probably not. So each word is considered individually. So the comma after "Hello" is not a word, so we just leave it as is. Wait, but the instruction says to replace all words with three synonyms. So each word, including separate words like "my", "name", etc., should have synonyms, but not the names of people or places.
So, the key steps are:
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. Novinha na cam se masturbando
This seems like a complex problem. The user's main goal is to have all words replaced except names. So, perhaps the solution is to assume that any word in the input text that is a proper noun (name) is left as is, and all others are replaced. But since the assistant can't determine if a word is a proper noun without context, the best approach is to rely on the user to correctly identify which words are names. The instruction says "Leave names unchanged," so the user might provide a text where certain words are names and others are not. The assistant should process the text accordingly. So, in my response, if there are names
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, mysyn1 namesyn3 issyn1 Johnsyn2." 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. Probably not