Hmm, maybe it's ? llandrwyd is clearly Welsh-like: Llan (church) + drwyd (through).
Try ROT13: t→g, h→u, m→z, y→l, l→y → g u z l y t→g, l→y, g→t, h→u, r→e, a→n, m→z → g y t u e n z l→y, a→n, y→l, t→g → y n l g l→y, l→y, a→n, n→a, d→q, r→e, w→j, y→l, d→q → y y n a q e j l q
Let me try interpreting it step by step.
t→s, h→g, m→l, y→x, l→k → sglxk t→s, l→k, g→f, h→g, r→q, a→z, m→l → skfgqzl l→k, a→z, y→x, t→s → kzxs l→k, l→k, a→z, n→m, d→c, r→q, w→v, y→x, d→c → kkzm cqvxc (no) Given the time, I’d guess it's "the military telegram late last night" or something similar, but not fitting neatly. thmyl tlghram layt llandrwyd
No.
That’s messy. But if it's on QWERTY:
Let’s try shifting each letter one key right (to reverse): Hmm, maybe it's
t ← y (since y is left of t on QWERTY) h ← g m ← n y ← t l ← k So thmyl = y g n t k → "y g n t k" (no).
This looks like a phrase written with a simple letter-substitution cipher, possibly a keyboard shift or phonetic play.
t→g, h→s, m→n, y→b, l→o → gsnbo (no) t→s, h→g, m→l, y→x, l→k → sglxk t→s,
But a might be: Auto-detect and decode simple substitution ciphers (Caesar, Atbash, keyboard shift) in user input. Example: if user types "thmyl tlghram layt llandrwyd" , the system tries common shifts and suggests likely plaintext like "the military telegram last llandrwyd" (if llandrwyd is a name).
No.
Try shifting one key left instead (to decode original intended letters):
Reverse each word: thmyl → lymht tlghram → marhglt layt → tyal llandrwyd → dywrdnall
On QWERTY: t → r / y / g h → g / j m → n y → t / u l → k