"guzly adgg nlz" not English. But a known solution for "thmyl nqtt aym" appears online in puzzle forums — it’s actually ? Let’s test reverse each word first:
Result: "nbz ggjm o bnsg"? No. But another approach: This looks like a (each letter shifted on QWERTY).
So "thmyl" → "gsnbo"? That doesn't look like a word. Maybe it's ? thmyl nqtt aym
Let’s try : "thmyl nqtt aym" reversed → "mya ttqn lymht".
Actually "please help me" → Atbash: p (16) ↔ k (11) l (12) ↔ o (15) e (5) ↔ v (22) a (1) ↔ z (26) s (19) ↔ h (8) e (5) ↔ v (22) → "kovzhv" Then reverse: "vhzvok" — not matching. So no. "guzly adgg nlz" not English
Result: "obnsg ggjm nbz" — not English. Given the pattern, I suspect the intended solution is (common test for Atbash + word reversal). Let's check:
"please help me" reversed word-wise: "esaelp pleh em" Atbash of "esaelp" = vhzovk (no). But if we apply Atbash then reverse: That doesn't look like a word
t → r h → g m → n y → t l → k space n → b q → w t → r t → r space a → (nothing left of a? maybe a→]) Not matching.
"thmyl nqtt aym" — trying a common one: each letter shifted one key to the left on QWERTY:
Now Atbash: m ↔ n y ↔ b a ↔ z space stays t ↔ g t ↔ g q ↔ j n ↔ m space l ↔ o y ↔ b m ↔ n h ↔ s t ↔ g
The string appears to be a cipher or encoded message.