Meyd-718 Bercinta Cepat Dengan Janda Sebelah Rumah Riho Fujimori - Indo18 -

Let me go through the example provided in the user's initial message. They had "example@example.com" and "123 Main St, Anytown, USA 12345." In "example@example.com," the first word "example" is a regular noun (a sample), but in the email context, it's part of the email address. Since the email address is a name/capitalized entity, perhaps I should leave "example" as is. Wait, emails typically aren't capitalized beyond the domain part. The username part is often lowercase. So maybe "example" is part of the username here, so it should remain unchanged. But the user said to keep names intact. Unless "example.com" is considered a name, like a domain name, but again, that might depend on context.

But how to implement this without knowing specific rules for name detection? Maybe the user expects a general approach where any capitalized word is considered a name unless it's a common noun. However, this could lead to errors because some common nouns might start with a capital letter. For example, in the phrase "Apple is a fruit," "Apple" is a common noun and should have variants like "apple, orange, banana," but if it's part of a sentence where it's a company, it should stay "Apple." Let me go through the example provided in

hi planet

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. Wait, emails typically aren't capitalized beyond the domain

Looking back at the example, "example@example.com" would be considered a name, so it remains unchanged. "123 Main St, Anytown, USA 12345" is an address, so that's a name. Then the rest of the words, if any, would be converted. However, in the provided example, there's no other text. The user included "example@example.com" and "123 Main St, Anytown, USA 12345" as placeholders. But the user said to keep names intact

So, the approach would be:

In summary, the steps I need to follow are: