Given the phrase includes “mntdy” and “ghram” — “ghram” looks like “gram” with an h. Possibly a simple letter shift of +1 or -1? Try -1 (shift backward 1):
But “mntdy” ROT13: m→z, n→a, t→g, d→q, y→l → “zagql” — not promising.
Given the lack of clear result and time, I’ll conclude this is likely a (common for “reply” etc.):
If we try a Caesar shift of -3 (common in simple ciphers): rwayt myhaf wfysl kamlh bdwn rdwd mntdy ghram
This looks like a phrase written in a shifted or scrambled alphabet, possibly a simple Caesar cipher or a keyboard-shift cipher. Let me try a quick Caesar shift analysis.
Row3: z x c v b n m , . / Left shift: z→(none), x→z, c→x, v→c, b→v, n→b, m→n, ,→m, .→,, /→.
But I notice “rwayt” looks like “write” if w→r? No. Given the phrase includes “mntdy” and “ghram” —
Given the constraint, I suspect the intended plaintext is: — but that doesn’t fit length well.
Try shift -5:
Let me try ROT13 on whole string:
Given the limits, I think the intended solution is , but that’s a guess from pattern matching “mntdy” ≈ “without” (m→w? n→i? t→t? d→h? y→o? no).
r → m w → r a → v y → t t → o → “mrvto” (still not clear)