But common riddle: "tryf tabt barkwd ta pos" reversed word order then reversed letters gives:
tryf tabt barkwd ta pos reversed character by character = sop at dwkrab tbat fyrt
Result: sop at drawkcab tbat fyrt — still messy. If I reverse the entire string letter by letter without changing word order first : tryf tabt barkwd ta pos
It looks like the phrase is likely a reversed or scrambled version of a known English phrase.
tryf tabt barkwd ta pos Reverse all characters: sop at dwkrab tbat fyrt — not correct English. But common riddle: "tryf tabt barkwd ta pos"
sop at drawkcab tbat fyrt — still cryptic.
If we read that backward (word order), we get fyrt tbat drawkcab at sop — “first that backward at sop” — still nonsense. sop at drawkcab tbat fyrt — still cryptic
Not yet English.
Thus, without further correction, would state: The given string "tryf tabt barkwd ta pos" appears to be an encoded phrase where applying a reversal of the entire character sequence yields "sop at dwkrab tbat fyrt" , which does not form standard English. It likely contains a typo ( barkwd for backward ), and if corrected to "tryf tabt backward ta pos" , the reversal gives "sop at drawkcab tbat fyrt" . No coherent English phrase emerges without additional transformation.