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#1
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I have been working on this for some time. I am ready to give up.
Is it even a cryptogram? ONNT-NPOY-NPNP. NUNVNS-NRNV-NV. NPNUNO-NRNR-NR. NVNUNP-NP-NP. NPNRNR-NQNO-NT-NU-NPNU-NPON. NPNRNR-OY-NV. NQNO-NQNQ-NU. Anybody that can solve it and tell me how, would allow me to grow some of my hair back. Thanks |
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#2
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Hmm... well at first I thought it would be a fairly easy digraphic substitution, but
that didn't quite work. Do you have any more information or context? Where did this come from(for instance)? I'll play around with it some more |
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#3
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The letters seem to be in two kinds of pairs, N- or O-. That's as far as I got, because the resulting words max out at 3 letters long. Is there any chance that they are numbers, and this is a math problem?
__________________
Slotted spoons don't hold much soup. - Stephen Sondheim
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#4
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Where did it come from? Was it on this site? I reads almost like a child's rhyme of some kind.
Vicki |
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#5
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Could it be the lyrics to a rap song?
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#6
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Its not a substitution cypher
too many instances of the same letter i agree with Lurker ...it looks mathematical. its not from this site, Iltquilt. it might be nonsensical though.
__________________
Courage is the art of being the only one who knows you're scared to death. |
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#7
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Not sure why you dismiss a substitution cipher so readily. There are 10 distinct digraphs. So, replacing them with the digits 0-9 seems reasonable, although I cannot make out anything useful with the numbers - yet. I'm still waiting for additional information - and there must be some - even if that's so-and-so made it up. It's fairly easy to construct a nearly impossible to solve cipher for "short" messages.
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