The user has given specific instructions: 1. Don’t echo them back. 2. Don’t echo the sent text. 3. Only provide Spanish text. 4. Make the text look good visually. 5. Don’t add any other text, even typos. 6. Rewrite the title and translate it to Spanish. The original text is: “Real Madrid plotting move for 20-year-old star nicknamed the Moroccan Cristiano Ronaldo: Reports” I need to: – Rewrite the title in Spanish, not just a literal translation. – Make it visually appealing (perhaps using formatting like bold or line breaks, but the instruction says “only provide Spanish text”, so I should keep it as plain text but well-structured). – Only output the final Spanish title. I should think of a catchy Spanish headline that conveys the same meaning. Possible elements: – Real Madrid está tramitando/planeando/negociando… – por una joven estrella de 20 años… – apodado ‘el Cristiano Ronaldo marroquí’… – Según informes/Reportes… I’ll craft a compelling Spanish headline. **Real Madrid negocia por el joven astro apodado ‘el Cristiano Ronaldo marroquí’: Reportes**

The user has given specific instructions:
1. Don’t echo them back.
2. Don’t echo the sent text.
3. Only provide Spanish text.
4. Make the text look good visually.
5. Don’t add any other text, even typos.
6. Rewrite the title and translate it to Spanish.

The original text is: “Real Madrid plotting move for 20-year-old star nicknamed the Moroccan Cristiano Ronaldo: Reports”

I need to:
– Rewrite the title in Spanish, not just a literal translation.
– Make it visually appealing (perhaps using formatting like bold or line breaks, but the instruction says “only provide Spanish text”, so I should keep it as plain text but well-structured).
– Only output the final Spanish title.

I should think of a catchy Spanish headline that conveys the same meaning. Possible elements:
– Real Madrid está tramitando/planeando/negociando…
– por una joven estrella de 20 años…
– apodado ‘el Cristiano Ronaldo marroquí’…
– Según informes/Reportes…

I’ll craft a compelling Spanish headline.


**Real Madrid negocia por el joven astro apodado ‘el Cristiano Ronaldo marroquí’: Reportes**

Se dice que el Real Madrid quiere al jugador marroquí Othmane Maamma. Podrían intentar ficharlo pronto. Ahora juega en el Watford, donde se ha vuelto muy importante. Maamma se hizo famoso después de ser el mejor jugador en la Copa Mundial Sub-20 de la FIFA 2025. Ayudó a su selección a ganar y recibió el … Leer más

The user has given me a set of rules: 1. Don’t echo them back. 2. Don’t echo the sent text. 3. Only provide Spanish text. 4. Make the text look good visually. 5. Don’t add any other text from me, even typos. They want me to rewrite the title and translate it to Spanish: “United Kingdom and Spain on track to have 2025 as hottest year on record” I need to: 1. Translate this title into Spanish. 2. Rewrite it in a way that looks good visually. 3. Only provide the Spanish text. I should not include any English text or any additional commentary from myself. I should just output the translated and rewritten title in Spanish. The original title is: “United Kingdom and Spain on track to have 2025 as hottest year on record” A good Spanish translation could be: “El Reino Unido y España, rumbo a que 2025 sea el año más caluroso registrado” To make it look good visually, I can consider using a more impactful structure, perhaps with a colon or a different phrasing that is common in Spanish headlines. Some options: – “2025, rumbo a ser el año más caluroso registrado en el Reino Unido y España” – “El Reino Unido y España: 2025 podría ser el año más caluroso jamás registrado” – “Reino Unido y España encaminados a que 2025 sea el año más caluroso de la historia” I need to pick one that is accurate and visually appealing. The second option with a colon might work well for a headline. Reino Unido y España: 2025 en camino de ser el año más caluroso registrado

The user has given me a set of rules:
1. Don’t echo them back.
2. Don’t echo the sent text.
3. Only provide Spanish text.
4. Make the text look good visually.
5. Don’t add any other text from me, even typos.

They want me to rewrite the title and translate it to Spanish: “United Kingdom and Spain on track to have 2025 as hottest year on record”

I need to:
1. Translate this title into Spanish.
2. Rewrite it in a way that looks good visually.
3. Only provide the Spanish text.

I should not include any English text or any additional commentary from myself. I should just output the translated and rewritten title in Spanish.

The original title is: “United Kingdom and Spain on track to have 2025 as hottest year on record”

A good Spanish translation could be: “El Reino Unido y España, rumbo a que 2025 sea el año más caluroso registrado”

To make it look good visually, I can consider using a more impactful structure, perhaps with a colon or a different phrasing that is common in Spanish headlines.

Some options:
– “2025, rumbo a ser el año más caluroso registrado en el Reino Unido y España”
– “El Reino Unido y España: 2025 podría ser el año más caluroso jamás registrado”
– “Reino Unido y España encaminados a que 2025 sea el año más caluroso de la historia”

I need to pick one that is accurate and visually appealing. The second option with a colon might work well for a headline.


Reino Unido y España: 2025 en camino de ser el año más caluroso registrado

No es solo en España y las Baleares donde los veranos se están volviendo más cálidos; el Reino Unido también está registrando temperaturas récord. Tras el verano más caluroso en España desde que comenzaron los registros en 1961, superando incluso al de 2022 que ostentaba el récord hasta entonces, el Reino Unido encamina a que … Leer más

The user has given specific rules: 1. Don’t echo the user back. 2. Don’t echo the sent text. 3. Only provide Spanish text. 4. Make the text look good visually. 5. Don’t add any other text from the user, even typos. The task is to rewrite the title and translate it to Spanish: “Two-mile walk near Bury offers woodland and scenic views” I need to: – Translate the title to Spanish. – Rewrite it to make it sound natural and visually appealing in Spanish. – Only output the Spanish text, no explanations, no echo of the original. Original title: “Two-mile walk near Bury offers woodland and scenic views” Key elements: – “Two-mile walk” – “Caminata de dos millas” or “Paseo de dos millas” – “near Bury” – “cerca de Bury” (Bury is a place name, so it should remain as is unless there’s a known Spanish equivalent, which I don’t think there is) – “offers woodland and scenic views” – “ofrece bosque y vistas panorámicas” or “ofrece un entorno boscoso y paisajes escénicos” I should make it sound like a nice title, perhaps more engaging. In Spanish, titles often use more descriptive language. Possible translations: 1. “Un paseo de dos millas cerca de Bury ofrece bosque y vistas panorámicas” 2. “Caminata de dos millas cerca de Bury con bosque y paisajes escénicos” 3. “Recorrido de dos millas cerca de Bury: bosque y vistas espectaculares” I think the third option sounds more engaging and visually appealing. It uses “Recorrido” which implies a route or trail, and “vistas espectaculares” sounds more appealing than “scenic views”. Let me go with: “Recorrido de dos millas cerca de Bury: bosque y vistas espectaculares” This has a colon which adds visual appeal and breaks up the title nicely. Recorrido de dos millas cerca de Bury: bosque y vistas espectaculares

The user has given specific rules:
1. Don’t echo the user back.
2. Don’t echo the sent text.
3. Only provide Spanish text.
4. Make the text look good visually.
5. Don’t add any other text from the user, even typos.

The task is to rewrite the title and translate it to Spanish: “Two-mile walk near Bury offers woodland and scenic views”

I need to:
– Translate the title to Spanish.
– Rewrite it to make it sound natural and visually appealing in Spanish.
– Only output the Spanish text, no explanations, no echo of the original.

Original title: “Two-mile walk near Bury offers woodland and scenic views”

Key elements:
– “Two-mile walk” – “Caminata de dos millas” or “Paseo de dos millas”
– “near Bury” – “cerca de Bury” (Bury is a place name, so it should remain as is unless there’s a known Spanish equivalent, which I don’t think there is)
– “offers woodland and scenic views” – “ofrece bosque y vistas panorámicas” or “ofrece un entorno boscoso y paisajes escénicos”

I should make it sound like a nice title, perhaps more engaging. In Spanish, titles often use more descriptive language.

Possible translations:
1. “Un paseo de dos millas cerca de Bury ofrece bosque y vistas panorámicas”
2. “Caminata de dos millas cerca de Bury con bosque y paisajes escénicos”
3. “Recorrido de dos millas cerca de Bury: bosque y vistas espectaculares”

I think the third option sounds more engaging and visually appealing. It uses “Recorrido” which implies a route or trail, and “vistas espectaculares” sounds more appealing than “scenic views”.

Let me go with: “Recorrido de dos millas cerca de Bury: bosque y vistas espectaculares”

This has a colon which adds visual appeal and breaks up the title nicely.


Recorrido de dos millas cerca de Bury: bosque y vistas espectaculares

El Sendero Circular de la Finca Stubbins es una ruta de dos millas que empieza en Stubbins Vale Road, en Ramsbottom. El National Trust lo describe como una ‘aventura perfecta para toda la familia’ y resalta su mezcla de belleza natural y patrimonio industrial. Dicen: “Una ruta circular de dos millas que lo tiene todo: … Leer más

thoughts 1. **Rule 1: Don’t echo me back.** I must not repeat the original English sentence in my response. 2. **Rule 2: Don’t echo the sent text.** This seems redundant with rule 1, but it reinforces that I should not include the source text. 3. **Rule 3: Only provide Spanish text.** My entire output must be in Spanish. No English, not even for explanations. 4. **Rule 4: Make the text look good visually.** This likely means using proper capitalization, punctuation, and perhaps a title format. 5. **Rule 5: Don’t add any other text from you, even typos.** I must only provide the translated title. No introductory text, no “here is your translation,” no comments. Just the Spanish text. I must also be careful to avoid introducing errors. 6. **Task:** Rewrite the title and translate it to Spanish. “Donald Trump says Christians are being persecuted in Nigeria.” **Approach:** – I need to translate the title accurately and idiomatically. – “Donald Trump says” -> “Donald Trump afirma” or “Donald Trump dice”. “Afirma” (states/affirms) is slightly more formal and common for news headlines. – “Christians are being persecuted” -> “los cristianos son perseguidos”. The passive voice is common in Spanish headlines. – “in Nigeria” -> “en Nigeria”. – To make it visually good, I should use title case or a standard headline format. Spanish headlines often use sentence case (only the first word and proper nouns capitalized). – A good translation could be: “Donald Trump afirma que los cristianos son perseguidos en Nigeria”. – This is concise, accurate, and follows Spanish headline conventions.Donald Trump afirma que los cristianos son perseguidos en Nigeria

thoughts
1.  **Rule 1: Don’t echo me back.** I must not repeat the original English sentence in my response.
2.  **Rule 2: Don’t echo the sent text.** This seems redundant with rule 1, but it reinforces that I should not include the source text.
3.  **Rule 3: Only provide Spanish text.** My entire output must be in Spanish. No English, not even for explanations.
4.  **Rule 4: Make the text look good visually.** This likely means using proper capitalization, punctuation, and perhaps a title format.
5.  **Rule 5: Don’t add any other text from you, even typos.** I must only provide the translated title. No introductory text, no “here is your translation,” no comments. Just the Spanish text. I must also be careful to avoid introducing errors.
6.  **Task:** Rewrite the title and translate it to Spanish. “Donald Trump says Christians are being persecuted in Nigeria.”

**Approach:**
–   I need to translate the title accurately and idiomatically.
–   “Donald Trump says” -> “Donald Trump afirma” or “Donald Trump dice”. “Afirma” (states/affirms) is slightly more formal and common for news headlines.
–   “Christians are being persecuted” -> “los cristianos son perseguidos”. The passive voice is common in Spanish headlines.
–   “in Nigeria” -> “en Nigeria”.
–   To make it visually good, I should use title case or a standard headline format. Spanish headlines often use sentence case (only the first word and proper nouns capitalized).
–   A good translation could be: “Donald Trump afirma que los cristianos son perseguidos en Nigeria”.
–   This is concise, accurate, and follows Spanish headline conventions.Donald Trump afirma que los cristianos son perseguidos en Nigeria

Olaronke Alo, Unidad Global de Desinformación de la BBC, Chiamaka Enendu, Unidad Global de Desinformación de la BBC, y Ijeoma Ndukwe, Lagos Getty Images El presidente de Estados Unidos, Donald Trump, ha lanzado una nueva amenaza contra Nigeria si el gobierno "sigue permitiendo el asesinato de cristianos". En un video publicado en Truth Social prometió … Leer más

thought 1. **Rule 1: Don’t echo me back.** I must not repeat the user’s original request or any part of it verbatim in my response. 2. **Rule 2: Don’t echo the sent text.** I must not repeat the original English title I was given. My output should be a completely new, translated text. 3. **Rule 3: Only provide Spanish text.** My entire output must be in Spanish. No English words, not even the team names “Hearts” or “Old Firm” should remain in English if there are standard Spanish translations or transliterations. I cannot add any explanatory notes, introductions, or conclusions in English. 4. **Rule 4: Make the text look good visually.** This likely means using proper Spanish punctuation, capitalization, and formatting. I should structure it like a professional news headline, perhaps using a colon, a question mark, and a pipe symbol as in the original, but ensuring the Spanish flows naturally. 5. **Rule 5: Don’t add any other text from you, even typos.** I must not insert any additional commentary, opinions, or errors. My output should be a clean, direct, and accurate translation/rewrite of the provided title. **Translation/Rewrite Plan:** * **”Hearts:”** This is the team name. In Spanish sports journalism, foreign club names are often kept but adapted. “Heart of Midlothian” is commonly referred to as **”Hearts”** or **”el Hearts”**. Using “el Hearts” sounds more natural in Spanish for a headline. I’ll go with **”Hearts:”** for brevity, mirroring the original, as it’s a proper noun. * **”Will Derek McInnes’ side split the Old Firm?”**: This is the main question. * “Will… side” -> “¿Podrá el equipo de…” (“Will the team of… be able to”) * “Derek McInnes” -> Names are typically not translated, so it stays **”Derek McInnes”**. * “split the Old Firm” -> This is the key phrase. “The Old Firm” refers to Celtic and Rangers. The verb “split” here means to come between them in the league standings. A good Spanish equivalent used in football context is **”quebrar la hegemonía”** (break the hegemony) or **”interponerse en el duopolio”** (interpose themselves in the duopoly). “Quebrar la hegemonía del Old Firm” is strong and clear. I need to translate “Old Firm” as well. It’s often called **”el Old Firm”** in Spanish, but for a full translation, I can say **”la dupla Celtic-Rangers”** (the Celtic-Rangers duo) or **”el duopolio del Celtic y Rangers”**. “Quebrar la hegemonía del Celtic y Rangers” is accurate and visually clean. * **” | “**: The pipe symbol can be kept for visual separation, it’s used in Spanish headlines too. * **”‘Second there for the taking’, says Christophe Berra”**: This is a quote. * “‘Second there for the taking'” -> This means second place in the league is achievable. A natural Spanish phrasing is **”El segundo puesto es asequible”** (The second place is attainable) or **”La segunda plaza está ahí para tomarla”** (a more direct translation that also works). “Está ahí para tomarla” is idiomatic. * “says Christophe Berra” -> **”asegura Christophe Berra”** (affirms Christophe Berra) is a common journalistic style, slightly more engaging than “dice”. **Putting it all together:** I need to structure it as a compelling Spanish headline. I’ll use a colon after “Hearts”, a question for the first part, the pipe, and then the quote. Final structure: `Hearts: ¿Podrá el equipo de Derek McInnes quebrar la hegemonía del Celtic y Rangers? | “La segunda plaza está ahí para tomarla”, asegura Christophe Berra` This follows all the rules: it’s all in Spanish, it doesn’t echo the original text verbatim, it’s a rewrite/translation, it’s visually formatted like a headline, and I’ve added nothing else.Hearts: ¿Podrá el equipo de Derek McInnes quebrar la hegemonía del Celtic y Rangers? | “La segunda plaza está ahí para tomarla”, asegura Christophe Berra

thought
1.  **Rule 1: Don’t echo me back.** I must not repeat the user’s original request or any part of it verbatim in my response.
2.  **Rule 2: Don’t echo the sent text.** I must not repeat the original English title I was given. My output should be a completely new, translated text.
3.  **Rule 3: Only provide Spanish text.** My entire output must be in Spanish. No English words, not even the team names “Hearts” or “Old Firm” should remain in English if there are standard Spanish translations or transliterations. I cannot add any explanatory notes, introductions, or conclusions in English.
4.  **Rule 4: Make the text look good visually.** This likely means using proper Spanish punctuation, capitalization, and formatting. I should structure it like a professional news headline, perhaps using a colon, a question mark, and a pipe symbol as in the original, but ensuring the Spanish flows naturally.
5.  **Rule 5: Don’t add any other text from you, even typos.** I must not insert any additional commentary, opinions, or errors. My output should be a clean, direct, and accurate translation/rewrite of the provided title.

**Translation/Rewrite Plan:**

*   **”Hearts:”** This is the team name. In Spanish sports journalism, foreign club names are often kept but adapted. “Heart of Midlothian” is commonly referred to as **”Hearts”** or **”el Hearts”**. Using “el Hearts” sounds more natural in Spanish for a headline. I’ll go with **”Hearts:”** for brevity, mirroring the original, as it’s a proper noun.
*   **”Will Derek McInnes’ side split the Old Firm?”**: This is the main question.
    *   “Will… side” -> “¿Podrá el equipo de…” (“Will the team of… be able to”)
    *   “Derek McInnes” -> Names are typically not translated, so it stays **”Derek McInnes”**.
    *   “split the Old Firm” -> This is the key phrase. “The Old Firm” refers to Celtic and Rangers. The verb “split” here means to come between them in the league standings. A good Spanish equivalent used in football context is **”quebrar la hegemonía”** (break the hegemony) or **”interponerse en el duopolio”** (interpose themselves in the duopoly). “Quebrar la hegemonía del Old Firm” is strong and clear. I need to translate “Old Firm” as well. It’s often called **”el Old Firm”** in Spanish, but for a full translation, I can say **”la dupla Celtic-Rangers”** (the Celtic-Rangers duo) or **”el duopolio del Celtic y Rangers”**. “Quebrar la hegemonía del Celtic y Rangers” is accurate and visually clean.
*   **” | “**: The pipe symbol can be kept for visual separation, it’s used in Spanish headlines too.
*   **”‘Second there for the taking’, says Christophe Berra”**: This is a quote.
    *   “‘Second there for the taking'” -> This means second place in the league is achievable. A natural Spanish phrasing is **”El segundo puesto es asequible”** (The second place is attainable) or **”La segunda plaza está ahí para tomarla”** (a more direct translation that also works). “Está ahí para tomarla” is idiomatic.
    *   “says Christophe Berra” -> **”asegura Christophe Berra”** (affirms Christophe Berra) is a common journalistic style, slightly more engaging than “dice”.

**Putting it all together:**

I need to structure it as a compelling Spanish headline. I’ll use a colon after “Hearts”, a question for the first part, the pipe, and then the quote.

Final structure: `Hearts: ¿Podrá el equipo de Derek McInnes quebrar la hegemonía del Celtic y Rangers? | “La segunda plaza está ahí para tomarla”, asegura Christophe Berra`

This follows all the rules: it’s all in Spanish, it doesn’t echo the original text verbatim, it’s a rewrite/translation, it’s visually formatted like a headline, and I’ve added nothing else.Hearts: ¿Podrá el equipo de Derek McInnes quebrar la hegemonía del Celtic y Rangers? | “La segunda plaza está ahí para tomarla”, asegura Christophe Berra

El segundo lugar está para tomarlo, pero ganar el primer lugar va a ser muy difícil. El Hearts ha tenido un comienzo de temporada increíble. El ex-capitán Christophe Berra apoya la predicción de Tony Bloom sobre que el equipo puede desafiar al Old Firm y ganar la liga escocesa en los próximos 10 años. Derek … Leer más