Download Video Ngintip Cewek Cantik Mandi [POPULAR × BLUEPRINT]
- For each word in the text: - If the first character is uppercase (and the rest are lowercase), treat it as a brand name and leave it as is. - Else, generate three synonyms/variants and put them in spintax.
But how to handle punctuation? The user's text might have punctuation attached to words. For example, "Apple's" would be a brand name? Well, if it's a contraction, maybe not. Wait, "Apple's" is possessive. But if the original is "Apple" as a brand, then "Apple's" is part of it. However, the user said to keep brand names, so maybe we need to consider "Apple's" as a brand if "Apple" is a brand. But this complicates things. Maybe the user expects me to handle such cases by keeping any word that's part of a brand, but again, without clear rules, this is ambiguous. Download Video Ngintip Cewek Cantik Mandi
- "Apple" is a brand name, left as is. - "is" → is - "a" → the - "great" → wonderful - "brand" → corporation - For each word in the text: -
Wait, maybe the user's instruction is such that they want me to apply spintax to every word except the brand names. So in the given text, I need to identify the brand names and leave them as they are, while spinning the rest with three variants. However, without a way to automatically detect brand names, maybe I should just leave all words with uppercase first letters as brand names. That might be the best approach. For example, "Apple" would be a brand name, so I don't spin it. "apple" would be a regular word and get three variants. The user's text might have punctuation attached to words