Thmyl Brnamj Ywr Frydwm Mhkr Alakhdr • Confirmed & Verified

or something similar.

But reverse thinking: “alakhdr” plaintext could be “al akhdar” (الاخضر). So “mhkr” maybe “mhkr” → “akhdar”? That would require m→a (-12), h→k (+3) — inconsistent.

Let me try to see if it's a simple substitution cipher (like Atbash, Caesar, etc.). thmyl brnamj ywr frydwm mhkr alakhdr

But the phrase length is: thmyl (5) brnamj (6) ywr (3) frydwm (6) mhkr (4) alakhdr (7)

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

So “thmyl” → “guzly” — no.

t → g h → u m → z y → l l → y

Let’s test the first word “thmyl” with ROT: t (20) → maybe m (13) if -7: t(20)-7=13=m h(8)-7=1=a? No, that gives m? Wait, h(8)-7=1=a → but we have “thmyl” 2nd letter is h in cipher → so if h→a, that’s -7, then m→f? Let's check properly:

"thmyl" reversed = "lymht" — not obvious. That would require m→a (-12), h→k (+3) — inconsistent

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).