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Thmyl-jy-ty-ay-adlb | FAST • BLUEPRINT |

gsnbo-qb-gb-zb-zwoy

Put hyphens back where they were (original had hyphens after 5, then after 2, then 2, then 2, then 4 letters): Original: thmyl (5) - jy (2) - ty (2) - ay (2) - adlb (4)

"adlb" reversed = "blda" . Atbash of "blda" = "yowz" . Not helpful.

But given no context, I'll provide the direct Atbash result as the most standard response: thmyl-jy-ty-ay-adlb

So final guess: .

This doesn’t look like English yet. But if it's a (maybe the answer to a puzzle), the decoded phrase might be "gsnbo qb gb zb zwoy" which is nonsense — unless it's a further cipher.

Gives: "gzly - wl - gl - nl - nqyo" (after removing spaces: g z l y - w l - g l - n l - n q y o ) — not obviously English. But given no context, I'll provide the direct

The string "thmyl-jy-ty-ay-adlb" appears to be encoded, likely with a simple substitution cipher such as Atbash (where each letter is mapped to its reverse in the alphabet: A↔Z, B↔Y, etc.).

Given the phrasing in the prompt ( "thmyl-jy-ty-ay-adlb" — post ), maybe the answer expected is simply the as a final answer. I’ll compute directly with a quick tool mentally:

However, I recall a known puzzle: "thmyl" with Atbash = "gsnbo" — if you then reverse = "obnsg" = "obn sg" — still no. Gives: "gzly - wl - gl - nl

Backward: "blda-yt-ay-jy-lmht"

Atbash on "thmyljytyayadlb" (remove hyphens first):

If that's not the intended answer, you might need to reverse the string first, then apply Atbash, which would give:

t (20) → g (7) h (8) → u (21) m (13) → z (26) y (25) → l (12) l (12) → y (25) - j (10) → w (23) y (25) → l (12) - t (20) → g (7) y (25) → l (12) - a (1) → n (14) y (25) → l (12) - a (1) → n (14) d (4) → q (17) l (12) → y (25) b (2) → o (15)

Atbash positions: 5 letters → gsnbo 2 letters → qb 2 letters → gb 2 letters → zb 4 letters → zwoy