I got it now, I believe. Rawr. I can't find the damn remote for my mom's truck so now the alarm is off and my neighbors are all standing in their driveways and shit because I had to get my old friggin reading glasses.
OoOoOoOo My dad TOLD me that studying acient runes would be useless but i know what that says! I really do!!
it looks like hebrew and greek intertwined....... the little triangles are capitle deltas and there are hebrew characters in there........ I know I'm over thinking this, I always do.......
when you say that do you mean the character set is not english (clearly) or that the deciphered message is not in english, if it's not I can't figure this out, but if the deciphered message is in english I think I can
the third word is llvllvllvvl I don't know whether the l (letters) are vowels or consonants yet, but all the v's are vowels for sure
the y and the wind swept v (the third character in the third word) are definitly vowels working on figuring out the rest of the vowels, than we can start on consonants note: this will only work if this is a substitution code, if it is a cipher this is probably not at all accurate, ciphers require much more complex solving procedures, hopes are it's just a substitution......
That's exactly what I said to Nate... They're all middle bronze age age languages, so they all came from the same family. I also suspected there may be a little muslim/arabic in there, but not distinct enough for anyone to notice unless they really study the damn thing hard... The Indo-European language family is attested in twelve branches... some of them are extinct. But, to me, the majority of the encoded message seems to be in Ancient Greek and since the Greek alphabet has 24 letters, that only gives so much space to fill. The Greek language had the first true alphabet and went on to become, of course, Latin and Cyrillic... It started out with the Myceneans in the 16th century BC. I love languagessss. Whoever wrote it has too much damn time on their hands.
well I haven't actually gone through and figured it out yet, I decided to sleep on it though and decided that yes it does look like a substitution code because of the vowel frequency, only a very very complicated cipher is going to be able to replicate that, granted you can do ciphers like that on a computer, only a very very small percentage of people on this earth have both the cryptographic savvy and the computer saavy to pull it off also zeta functions don't cotton well to that sort of thing.....
seriously though, I have to know this to be able to figure this out beyone vowels, perhaps even to do that, different languages have different rules and to defeat a substitution code you use those rules to break it down one letter at a time so is the unencoded\deciphered message in english?
alright the sixth character (the upward swish into the n sort of character) only shows up once and is the only unique character btw, the reason I'm trying to solve this open source is that if anyone else sees a way to use my info and can solve it before me, go right ahead, this is meant to try to get this solved somewhat quicker