If we assume a simple shift cipher (like ROT or Caesar cipher), let’s try analyzing the words:
If you meant this as a puzzle, please provide the cipher type or expected answer, and I’ll solve it properly.
Thus I’d conclude: in a single step. Could be a Caesar shift of 5: tnzyl → y s e d q? t+5=y, n+5=s, z+5=e, y+5=d, l+5=q → ysedq — no. tnzyl brnamj fy by an mjany
Actually, ROT13 on “brnamj”: b→o, r→e, n→a, a→n, m→z, j→w → “oe anzw” no. Maybe each word is reversed? “tnzyl” reversed = “lyznt” no.
Given the context of the question, but missing a clear decode, the most likely intent is: If we assume a simple shift cipher (like
Given typical puzzles, the simplest possibility is : tnzyl → family? t→g, n→a, z→m, y→l, l→y → “gamily”? Not family. gamily isn't a word. But maybe “gnzyl” as “gnzyl” no.
Given the time, I’d guess it’s a simple ROT cipher: ROT-5: tnzyl → yse d q? Or ROT-13 (common for puzzles): t→g, n→a, z→m, y→l, l→y → “gamily” → “family”? bingo! Check “brnamj” ROT-13: b→o, r→e, n→a, a→n, m→z, j→w → “oe anzw”? No. But “brnamj” could be “problem” (p→b? p=16, b=2, diff 14, not ROT13). t+5=y, n+5=s, z+5=e, y+5=d, l+5=q → ysedq — no
Alternatively, maybe it’s just a known phrase scrambled for fun.