Wait — "gsnbo" is close to "gnsbo" or "snbo"? But "qb gb" = "qb gb"? Could be "be be" if reversed? Let’s try reversing the Atbash output: "yowz bz bg obnsg" — still no.

But maybe the plaintext is ?

Now Atbash each letter (keep hyphens): b(2)→y(25) l(12)→o(15) d(4)→w(23) a(1)→z(26) y(25)→b(2) t(20)→g(7) a(1)→z(26) y(25)→b(2) j(10)→q(17) y(25)→b(2) l(12)→o(15) m(13)→n(14) h(8)→s(19) t(20)→g(7)

Atbash on "thmyljytyayadlb" (remove hyphens first):

Perhaps it's a simple Caesar shift? Try ROT13 on the original:

The string "thmyl-jy-ty-ay-adlb" appears to be encoded, likely with a simple substitution cipher such as Atbash (where each letter is mapped to its reverse in the alphabet: A↔Z, B↔Y, etc.).

Given the phrasing in the prompt ( "thmyl-jy-ty-ay-adlb" — post ), maybe the answer expected is simply the as a final answer. I’ll compute directly with a quick tool mentally:

However, I recall a known puzzle: "thmyl" with Atbash = "gsnbo" — if you then reverse = "obnsg" = "obn sg" — still no.

Result: "yowz - bg - zb - qb - onsg" .

Given the puzzle is likely from a simple cipher challenge, and "thmyl-jy-ty-ay-adlb" reversed and Atbash might give "your bg is ..." ? Let’s test known Atbash of common words: