thought Here’s a thinking process that could lead to the Spanish translation provided: 1. **Understand the Original Text & Rules:** * **Original:** “Main card, start time, main event walkouts, and more” * **Rules:** * No echoing back. * No echoing the sent text. * Only provide Spanish text. * Make it look good visually. * Don’t add any other text (no explanations, no typos). * So, the output must be *only* the translated, visually appealing Spanish text. No English, no “here is the translation”, nothing else. 2. **Deconstruct the Original Title:** * This is a title, likely for a fight/MMA/boxing event preview or guide. It’s a list of key pieces of information the article will cover. * “Main card”: The primary set of fights on the event, as opposed to preliminary or early prelims. * “Start time”: When the event begins. * “Main event walkouts”: The ceremonial entrances of the main event fighters. * “and more”: A catch-all phrase meaning additional relevant details. 3. **Initial Word-for-Word Translation (Brainstorming):** * “Main card”: “Tarjeta principal” is the standard term in Spanish for combat sports. * “Start time”: “Hora de inicio”. * “Main event walkouts”: This is a bit specific. “Main event” is “evento principal”. “Walkouts” refers to the fighters walking to the ring/octagon. “Entrada” or “camino al cuadrilátero/octágono” are common. “Entrada de los luchadores/peleadores” is very clear. * “and more”: “y más”. 4. **Consider Visual Appeal & Structure:** * The original is a simple comma-separated list. In Spanish, we can do the same. * However, for “visual appeal,” we can think about how it might be presented in an article. A title like this often uses formatting like bullet points, colons, or line breaks to make it scannable. * The rule says “make the text look good visually.” Since I can only provide text, I can use punctuation and line breaks (`\n`) to structure it. * Options: * **Simple List:** “Tarjeta principal, hora de inicio, entradas del evento principal y más.” (This is the direct translation, but a bit plain). * **Structured List (more visually appealing):** * Use line breaks to separate the items. This makes it easier to read at a glance, which is key for a title or headline. * Example structure: “` Tarjeta principal Hora de inicio Entradas del evento principal Y más… “` * This looks cleaner and more modern. 5. **Refine the Translation for Natural Spanish:** * “Main event walkouts” -> Let’s combine the ideas. “Entradas del evento principal” is perfectly clear and concise. * “and more” -> “Y más” is fine, but adding ellipsis (“…”) can make it feel more like a teaser, which is common in titles. “Y más…” works well. * Check for flow: “Tarjeta principal, Hora de inicio, Entradas del evento principal, Y más…” – when separated by line breaks, this reads very well. 6. **Final Check Against Rules:** * No echoing the original? ✓ (It’s all in Spanish). * Only Spanish text? ✓ (No English, no “translated by…”). * Visually appealing? ✓ (Using line breaks creates a clean, scannable list). * No extra text? ✓ (Just the title itself). 7. **Polish and Delivery:** * The final output is a clean, multi-line string in Spanish that accurately conveys all the information from the original title in a stylistically appropriate and visually clear manner.Tarjeta principal Hora de inicio Entradas del evento principal Y más…

thought
Here’s a thinking process that could lead to the Spanish translation provided:

1.  **Understand the Original Text & Rules:**
    *   **Original:** “Main card, start time, main event walkouts, and more”
    *   **Rules:**
        *   No echoing back.
        *   No echoing the sent text.
        *   Only provide Spanish text.
        *   Make it look good visually.
        *   Don’t add any other text (no explanations, no typos).
    *   So, the output must be *only* the translated, visually appealing Spanish text. No English, no “here is the translation”, nothing else.

2.  **Deconstruct the Original Title:**
    *   This is a title, likely for a fight/MMA/boxing event preview or guide. It’s a list of key pieces of information the article will cover.
    *   “Main card”: The primary set of fights on the event, as opposed to preliminary or early prelims.
    *   “Start time”: When the event begins.
    *   “Main event walkouts”: The ceremonial entrances of the main event fighters.
    *   “and more”: A catch-all phrase meaning additional relevant details.

3.  **Initial Word-for-Word Translation (Brainstorming):**
    *   “Main card”: “Tarjeta principal” is the standard term in Spanish for combat sports.
    *   “Start time”: “Hora de inicio”.
    *   “Main event walkouts”: This is a bit specific. “Main event” is “evento principal”. “Walkouts” refers to the fighters walking to the ring/octagon. “Entrada” or “camino al cuadrilátero/octágono” are common. “Entrada de los luchadores/peleadores” is very clear.
    *   “and more”: “y más”.

4.  **Consider Visual Appeal & Structure:**
    *   The original is a simple comma-separated list. In Spanish, we can do the same.
    *   However, for “visual appeal,” we can think about how it might be presented in an article. A title like this often uses formatting like bullet points, colons, or line breaks to make it scannable.
    *   The rule says “make the text look good visually.” Since I can only provide text, I can use punctuation and line breaks (`\n`) to structure it.
    *   Options:
        *   **Simple List:** “Tarjeta principal, hora de inicio, entradas del evento principal y más.” (This is the direct translation, but a bit plain).
        *   **Structured List (more visually appealing):**
            *   Use line breaks to separate the items. This makes it easier to read at a glance, which is key for a title or headline.
            *   Example structure:
                “`
                Tarjeta principal
                Hora de inicio
                Entradas del evento principal
                Y más…
                “`
            *   This looks cleaner and more modern.

5.  **Refine the Translation for Natural Spanish:**
    *   “Main event walkouts” -> Let’s combine the ideas. “Entradas del evento principal” is perfectly clear and concise.
    *   “and more” -> “Y más” is fine, but adding ellipsis (“…”) can make it feel more like a teaser, which is common in titles. “Y más…” works well.
    *   Check for flow: “Tarjeta principal, Hora de inicio, Entradas del evento principal, Y más…” – when separated by line breaks, this reads very well.

6.  **Final Check Against Rules:**
    *   No echoing the original? ✓ (It’s all in Spanish).
    *   Only Spanish text? ✓ (No English, no “translated by…”).
    *   Visually appealing? ✓ (Using line breaks creates a clean, scannable list).
    *   No extra text? ✓ (Just the title itself).

7.  **Polish and Delivery:**
    *   The final output is a clean, multi-line string in Spanish that accurately conveys all the information from the original title in a stylistically appropriate and visually clear manner.Tarjeta principal
Hora de inicio
Entradas del evento principal
Y más…

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