Was besagt die DIN ISO 13715? - kurz & einfach für Dich erklärt

Thmyl Brnamj Ywr Frydwm Mhkr Alakhdr -

or something similar.

So “thmyl” → “guzly” — no.

Given “alakhdr” clearly looks like “al-akhdar”, I’d say the phrase might be: thmyl brnamj ywr frydwm mhkr alakhdr

Could it be a cipher where each letter is shifted by a consistent amount?

Or maybe it's a simple shift like ROT3: t→w, h→k, m→p, y→b, l→o → “wkpbo” no. or something similar

Let me try to see if it's a simple substitution cipher (like Atbash, Caesar, etc.).

But easier: given the “feature:” before it, maybe this is a name? Let’s check the last word “alakhdr” — looks like Arabic name “al-akhdar” meaning “the green”. Indeed, “alakhdr” could be “al akhḍar” (الاخضر). Or maybe it's a simple shift like ROT3:

Try ROT-7: t(20) → 13=m h(8) → 1=a m(13) → 6=f y(25) → 18=r l(12) → 5=e Word = m a f r e → "mafre"? Not English.

Try ROT+something else.

It looks like you've provided a phrase that appears to be encoded or written in a cipher.

thmyl brnamj ywr frydwm mhkr alakhdr

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