Онлайн-курсы подготовки к экзаменам и собеседованиям по немецкому языку
Лично веду лучшие* разговорные курсы немецкого (Курсы B1, Курсы B2, Курсы С1) для желающих сдать экзамен, жить и работать в Германии, Австрии и Швейцарии. (* по мнению учеников)

Thmyl Nqtt Aym -

t (20) → g (7) h (8) → s (19) m (13) → n (14) y (25) → b (2) l (12) → o (15)

"please help me" reversed word-wise: "esaelp pleh em" Atbash of "esaelp" = vhzovk (no). But if we apply Atbash then reverse:

Result: "obnsg ggjm nbz" — not English. Given the pattern, I suspect the intended solution is (common test for Atbash + word reversal). Let's check: thmyl nqtt aym

"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:

thmyl → lymht nqtt → ttqn aym → mya t (20) → g (7) h (8) →

So "thmyl" → "gsnbo"? That doesn't look like a word. Maybe it's ?

Now Atbash each: l (12) ↔ o (15) y (25) ↔ b (2) m (13) ↔ n (14) h (8) ↔ s (19) t (20) ↔ g (7) → "obnsg" ttqn: t→g, t→g, q→j, n→m → "ggjm" mya: m→n, y→b, a→z → "nbz" Let's check: "guzly adgg nlz" not English

"thmyl nqtt aym" — trying a common one: each letter shifted one key to the left on QWERTY:

Alternatively, if we shift on QWERTY: t → y h → j m → , (not letter) — so no. Given the look and short length, it may be rot13 : thmyl → guzly (doesn’t make obvious sense) nqtt → adgg aym → nlz