But that result is nonsensical — it seems the mapping was done incorrectly or the original Arabic was typed in a different layout (perhaps someone typed Arabic words using an English keyboard without switching the layout properly).
althmyl- rb rb sat nwdz lshrmwtt bldy btklm ... althmyl- rb rb sat nwdz lshrmwtt bldy btklm ...
If you instead meant it as a — for example, typing Arabic letters while the keyboard is set to English (QWERTY) — here’s what happens: But that result is nonsensical — it seems
This appears to be a snippet of Arabic text written in a without the Arabic script. When typed on a standard US/UK keyboard where each key corresponds to an Arabic letter, the string: When typed on a standard US/UK keyboard where
A more likely intended reading (by mapping English letters back to the they would occupy if the user thought they were typing Arabic but had English layout active) would require a reverse mapping.
But since the sequence doesn't produce fluent Arabic, it might instead be a over English letters? Let's test: althmyl → reverse: lymhtla — not obvious.