We need to translate English content to natural native Latin American Spanish. Keep all HTML tags, attributes, URLs, phone numbers unchanged. Only translate text content within tags (including alt, title, maybe placeholders? alt/title may be considered content? Should keep unchanged? The instruction: Keep ALL HTML tags exactly as-is. That includes attributes content? Usually they mean tags themselves, but content inside attributes is part of HTML markup; translating alt text may be considered content but not a tag. However they said "Keep ALL HTML tags exactly as-is." They didn't explicitly say to keep attribute values unchanged. But safer to keep attribute values unchanged? They said "Do NOT add or remove content." Changing alt text would be changing content. But they want translation for travelers; likely they expect translation of visible text, including alt and title? Usually they'd want alt text translated too for accessibility. But they said keep HTML tags exactly as-is; attributes are part of tags; changing them changes the tag content (attribute values). Might be considered altering tags. To be safe, keep attribute values unchanged (including alt, title, href? href must stay unchanged as per instruction: Keep city/airport names and codes unchanged; phone numbers and booking URL unchanged. They didn't say to keep alt/title unchanged. However they said "Do NOT add or remove content." Changing alt text is changing content (the alt attribute's value). Might be considered content. But they likely want translation of visible text, not alt. However they said "Translate this airport-shuttle landing-page HTML body from English to NATURAL, native Latin American Spanish for travelers." Usually you'd translate visible text, alt text, etc. But they explicitly say keep HTML tags exactly as-is. That could be interpreted as not altering the tag names or structure, but you can change the content between tags and attribute values? The phrase "HTML tags" might refer to the markup itself (
Frisco to Dallas Airport Shuttle
Translate: "Frisco to Dallas Airport Shuttle" => "Traslado del Aeropuerto de Frisco a Dallas" maybe natural Latin American Spanish: "Traslado del Aeropuerto de Frisco a Dallas". Keep span style. Thus:Traslado del Aeropuerto de Frisco a Dallas
Next line:Round Trips Save You 10% Dallas to Frisco shuttle
Translate: "Round Trips Save You 10%" => "Los viajes redondos le ahorran un 10%". Keep link text translate: "Dallas to Frisco shuttle" => "Traslado de Dallas a Frisco". Keep href unchanged. Thus:Los viajes redondos le ahorran un 10% Traslado de Dallas a Frisco
Comment: keep unchanged. NextTraveling from Frisco to Dallas on our private door‑to‑door shuttle takes you down the familiar corridor of US‑75, also known as the Central Expressway, before merging onto I‑35E near the bustling North Dallas market. Along the way you’ll pass the iconic Frisco Square and the bustling Legacy West development, then glide past the historic Dallas Arts District and the Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza—a route that could only be described as the heart of North Texas, unmistakably linking these two distinct communities. Heading to downtown Dallas instead? See our Prosper to Dallas shuttle service for direct rides to Dallas.
We need to translate the paragraph, keep link href and title unchanged? Title attribute maybe translate? Title currently "Prosper to Dallas shuttle". We could translate title to Spanish but it's an attribute; maybe keep unchanged? Safer to keep unchanged? However they said keep HTML tags exactly as-is; title is attribute, part of tag. Changing it changes tag content but not tag itself. Might be okay. But to be safe, keep title unchanged. However they'd want natural Spanish; maybe they'd want title translated. I'm leaning to translate visible text only, keep attributes unchanged. Let's keep href and title unchanged. Thus translate paragraph. We'll produce Spanish translation: "Viajar de Frisco a Dallas en nuestro shuttle privado puerta a puerta lo lleva por el conocido corredor de la US‑75, también llamado Central Expressway, antes de incorporarse a la I‑35E cerca del bullicioso mercado del norte de Dallas. En el camino pasará por la icónica Frisco Square y el bullicioso desarrollo Legacy West, luego deslizarse junto al histórico Distrito de Artes de Dallas y el Sexto Piso del Museo en Dealey Plaza — una ruta que solo se puede describir como el corazón del norte de Texas, vinculando inequívocamente estas dos distintas comunidades. ¿Se dirige al centro de Dallas en su lugar? Consulte nuestro shuttle de Prosper a Dallas para