Monoalphabetic Equation











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A set of letters has been replaced by $a$, $b$, $c$, and $d$.

Following are some of the words that consist of those letters, and their meaning:




$abc = a title (n.)$



$abcd = a title > abc (n.), give cbad to (v.)$



$Dcba ⊂ (a title > abcd) (n.)$



$Dcba = Represents what often comes before or after bcd (n.)$



$bcd = ARGHH! (n.)$



$cbad = move abc to abcd (v.), land (v.)$




What are the letters that $a$, $b$, $c$, and $d$ replace, respectively?










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  • When you say alphabets do you mean letters?
    – gabbo1092
    Nov 27 at 15:00






  • 1




    @gabbo1092 Yes, these are English words.
    – Chrone
    Nov 27 at 15:02















up vote
9
down vote

favorite
1












A set of letters has been replaced by $a$, $b$, $c$, and $d$.

Following are some of the words that consist of those letters, and their meaning:




$abc = a title (n.)$



$abcd = a title > abc (n.), give cbad to (v.)$



$Dcba ⊂ (a title > abcd) (n.)$



$Dcba = Represents what often comes before or after bcd (n.)$



$bcd = ARGHH! (n.)$



$cbad = move abc to abcd (v.), land (v.)$




What are the letters that $a$, $b$, $c$, and $d$ replace, respectively?










share|improve this question
























  • When you say alphabets do you mean letters?
    – gabbo1092
    Nov 27 at 15:00






  • 1




    @gabbo1092 Yes, these are English words.
    – Chrone
    Nov 27 at 15:02













up vote
9
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
9
down vote

favorite
1






1





A set of letters has been replaced by $a$, $b$, $c$, and $d$.

Following are some of the words that consist of those letters, and their meaning:




$abc = a title (n.)$



$abcd = a title > abc (n.), give cbad to (v.)$



$Dcba ⊂ (a title > abcd) (n.)$



$Dcba = Represents what often comes before or after bcd (n.)$



$bcd = ARGHH! (n.)$



$cbad = move abc to abcd (v.), land (v.)$




What are the letters that $a$, $b$, $c$, and $d$ replace, respectively?










share|improve this question















A set of letters has been replaced by $a$, $b$, $c$, and $d$.

Following are some of the words that consist of those letters, and their meaning:




$abc = a title (n.)$



$abcd = a title > abc (n.), give cbad to (v.)$



$Dcba ⊂ (a title > abcd) (n.)$



$Dcba = Represents what often comes before or after bcd (n.)$



$bcd = ARGHH! (n.)$



$cbad = move abc to abcd (v.), land (v.)$




What are the letters that $a$, $b$, $c$, and $d$ replace, respectively?







word cipher language letters






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




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edited Nov 27 at 15:06









Rand al'Thor

68.6k14227457




68.6k14227457










asked Nov 27 at 14:57









Chrone

57714




57714












  • When you say alphabets do you mean letters?
    – gabbo1092
    Nov 27 at 15:00






  • 1




    @gabbo1092 Yes, these are English words.
    – Chrone
    Nov 27 at 15:02


















  • When you say alphabets do you mean letters?
    – gabbo1092
    Nov 27 at 15:00






  • 1




    @gabbo1092 Yes, these are English words.
    – Chrone
    Nov 27 at 15:02
















When you say alphabets do you mean letters?
– gabbo1092
Nov 27 at 15:00




When you say alphabets do you mean letters?
– gabbo1092
Nov 27 at 15:00




1




1




@gabbo1092 Yes, these are English words.
– Chrone
Nov 27 at 15:02




@gabbo1092 Yes, these are English words.
– Chrone
Nov 27 at 15:02










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
13
down vote



accepted










a, b, c, d are




s, i, r, e


"sir" = a title (given to a man)

"sire" = a title greater than "sir" (given to a king), or to give "rise" to

"Eris" = Name (names are titles) of someone greater than a "sire" (specifically, a greek goddess, see below)

"Eris" = Greek goddess of strife (strife can lead to or cause "ire", coming before or after it)

"ire" = anger

"rise" = move from "sir" to "sire", or to go up




etc.






share|improve this answer























  • Darn was just about to enter this
    – gabbo1092
    Nov 27 at 15:04










  • Yeah, got the answer quickly, but even with it I still don't fully get the third line. Any ideas?
    – Timoris
    Nov 27 at 15:18










  • @Timoris I'll give you a hint in another set of letters r13(z < x < t)
    – Chrone
    Nov 27 at 15:22











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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
13
down vote



accepted










a, b, c, d are




s, i, r, e


"sir" = a title (given to a man)

"sire" = a title greater than "sir" (given to a king), or to give "rise" to

"Eris" = Name (names are titles) of someone greater than a "sire" (specifically, a greek goddess, see below)

"Eris" = Greek goddess of strife (strife can lead to or cause "ire", coming before or after it)

"ire" = anger

"rise" = move from "sir" to "sire", or to go up




etc.






share|improve this answer























  • Darn was just about to enter this
    – gabbo1092
    Nov 27 at 15:04










  • Yeah, got the answer quickly, but even with it I still don't fully get the third line. Any ideas?
    – Timoris
    Nov 27 at 15:18










  • @Timoris I'll give you a hint in another set of letters r13(z < x < t)
    – Chrone
    Nov 27 at 15:22















up vote
13
down vote



accepted










a, b, c, d are




s, i, r, e


"sir" = a title (given to a man)

"sire" = a title greater than "sir" (given to a king), or to give "rise" to

"Eris" = Name (names are titles) of someone greater than a "sire" (specifically, a greek goddess, see below)

"Eris" = Greek goddess of strife (strife can lead to or cause "ire", coming before or after it)

"ire" = anger

"rise" = move from "sir" to "sire", or to go up




etc.






share|improve this answer























  • Darn was just about to enter this
    – gabbo1092
    Nov 27 at 15:04










  • Yeah, got the answer quickly, but even with it I still don't fully get the third line. Any ideas?
    – Timoris
    Nov 27 at 15:18










  • @Timoris I'll give you a hint in another set of letters r13(z < x < t)
    – Chrone
    Nov 27 at 15:22













up vote
13
down vote



accepted







up vote
13
down vote



accepted






a, b, c, d are




s, i, r, e


"sir" = a title (given to a man)

"sire" = a title greater than "sir" (given to a king), or to give "rise" to

"Eris" = Name (names are titles) of someone greater than a "sire" (specifically, a greek goddess, see below)

"Eris" = Greek goddess of strife (strife can lead to or cause "ire", coming before or after it)

"ire" = anger

"rise" = move from "sir" to "sire", or to go up




etc.






share|improve this answer














a, b, c, d are




s, i, r, e


"sir" = a title (given to a man)

"sire" = a title greater than "sir" (given to a king), or to give "rise" to

"Eris" = Name (names are titles) of someone greater than a "sire" (specifically, a greek goddess, see below)

"Eris" = Greek goddess of strife (strife can lead to or cause "ire", coming before or after it)

"ire" = anger

"rise" = move from "sir" to "sire", or to go up




etc.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Nov 27 at 15:25

























answered Nov 27 at 15:04









Timoris

1,321512




1,321512












  • Darn was just about to enter this
    – gabbo1092
    Nov 27 at 15:04










  • Yeah, got the answer quickly, but even with it I still don't fully get the third line. Any ideas?
    – Timoris
    Nov 27 at 15:18










  • @Timoris I'll give you a hint in another set of letters r13(z < x < t)
    – Chrone
    Nov 27 at 15:22


















  • Darn was just about to enter this
    – gabbo1092
    Nov 27 at 15:04










  • Yeah, got the answer quickly, but even with it I still don't fully get the third line. Any ideas?
    – Timoris
    Nov 27 at 15:18










  • @Timoris I'll give you a hint in another set of letters r13(z < x < t)
    – Chrone
    Nov 27 at 15:22
















Darn was just about to enter this
– gabbo1092
Nov 27 at 15:04




Darn was just about to enter this
– gabbo1092
Nov 27 at 15:04












Yeah, got the answer quickly, but even with it I still don't fully get the third line. Any ideas?
– Timoris
Nov 27 at 15:18




Yeah, got the answer quickly, but even with it I still don't fully get the third line. Any ideas?
– Timoris
Nov 27 at 15:18












@Timoris I'll give you a hint in another set of letters r13(z < x < t)
– Chrone
Nov 27 at 15:22




@Timoris I'll give you a hint in another set of letters r13(z < x < t)
– Chrone
Nov 27 at 15:22


















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