# Apply Multiple Substitutions To The Input You can apply multiple substitutions to the input of a `sed` command a couple ways. One of those ways is to use the `-e` flag multiple times to define substitutions that should be _appended_ to the `sed` script. ```bash $ echo 123 | sed -e 's/3/three/' -e 's/1/one/' one2three ``` Another way is to define a single string as the `sed` script and separate each substitution with a `;` (semicolon). ```bash $ echo 123 | sed 's/3/three/; s/1/one/' one2three ``` Each of these will run each substitution in the `sed` script sequentially for each line in the input.