The Full Story
Cryptography = "hidden secret"
In ancient Greek, the meaning of cryptography is "hidden secret." Cryptography is the study and practice of techniques for secure writing and reading of communication between two parties when there is conflict present.
During wartime, the military uses non-secure and highly secure encryption and decipher codes to assure clear and private communications.
Navajo Code Talkers
During WWII, the military created a code based on the complex, unwritten Navajo language in order to speed up communications and to introduce a more secure transfer of information.
The code primarily used word association by assigning a Navajo word to key phrases and military tactics.
The "Code Girls"
Over 8,000 women in Britain and 11,000 cryptographers (code makers) and cryptanalysts (code breakers) for the British and the United States Militaries were nicknamed "World War II Code Girls" and worked in secrecy to crack encryption devices and codes, such as Red and Purple, used by the Japanese military during World War II.
Q drop 40
On November 2, 2017, Q wrote the cryptic code:
4,10,20
A,b,c,d,e......
People soon figured out it was a simple non-secure cryptology found in Simple English Gematria — where A=1, B=2, C=3, D=4, E=5... thus making 4,10,20 = DJT, or "Donald John Trump".
Navy battleship incorporating International Morse Code — a non-secure series of signals coding the 26 basic Latin letters "A" through "Z" into dots and dashes.
Navajo Code Talkers were employed during WWII to use a little-known Native American language for transmitting information, translating three lines of English in 20 seconds and not 30 minutes from existing code-breaking machines.
British codebreakers during WWII called "Code Girls" were recruited for their talents with numbers and words — often recruited by tests requiring them to complete The Daily Telegraph's crossword in under 12 minutes.
Q drop 40 introduced Simple English Gematria as a form of secret/hidden communications.
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