At first glance, it looks like a substitution cipher — possibly an (where A↔Z, B↔Y, etc.), given the mix of seemingly random letters.
That gives azno-mjhn-ynm-zmgj-ohzm-zym-nibn — still nonsense. Could it be a keyboard shift cipher (each letter shifted to an adjacent key)? Or a Vigenère cipher with a hidden key? Better lead: The pattern xxxx-xxxx-xxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxx-xxxx (4-4-3-4-4-3-4) might be a book cipher , date reference , or encoded initials . zaml-nqsm-bmn-antq-lsan-abn-mrym
This string — "zaml-nqsm-bmn-antq-lsan-abn-mrym" — appears to be a structured cipher or code, not a standard phrase. At first glance, it looks like a substitution
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