Qdym — Tnzyl Ttbyq Fys Bwk
Then apply ROT13: lyznt → ylmag (no) qybtt → dl ogg ? d=4, l=12, space? no.
If you have a or context (e.g., from a puzzle, game, or book), please provide it for exact decryption. Otherwise, the plaintext remains undetermined. tnzyl ttbyq fys bwk qdym
Another guess: “every good boy does fine” — lengths: 5,4,3,4,4 — no. Then apply ROT13: lyznt → ylmag (no) qybtt → dl ogg
| Cipher Type | Result | Likelihood | |------------------|---------------------------------------------|-------------| | Caesar shift | No consistent English output found | Low | | Atbash | Produces nonsense | Low | | ROT13 | Only ggold appears plausible but not exact | Low | | Vigenère | Possible but requires key | Unknown | | Keyboard shift | No valid output | Low | | Simple substitution | Likely, but needs frequency analysis (too short) | Medium | If you have a or context (e
: The string is a simple substitution cipher of a short English phrase. Without more ciphertext or a key, decoding is ambiguous.
Not Atbash. Given the word lengths (5,5,3,3,4), it could be a phrase. Common short words (3 letters) in English: the , and , for , you , etc. 3-letter ciphertext: fys and bwk .
“Where are you going” — 5,3,3,5 — close but last word is 4 letters in ciphertext. Based on the analysis: