The {ram} "night", used in the following way is a timestamp:
{ram, leghchuq maH vIghro' je}
at night, we and the cat will see each other
Is the {qaStaHvIS ram} a timestamp too ? And the reason I am asking, is with regards to its placement in a sentence, which also happens to have a noun with a type-5 suffix. For example:
{juHDaq, qaStaHvIS ram, maHaD maH vIghro' je}
at home, during the night, we and the cat will be studying
{qaStaHvIS ram, juHDaq, maHaD maH vIghro' je}
during the night, at home, we and the cat will be studying
The way I understand it, there is no rule as to what needs to come first; a timestamp, or a noun with a type-5 suffix.
So, if the {qaStaHvIS ram} is a timestamp, then both of the above sentences must be correct.
But the question is, whether the {qaStaHvIS ram} is indeed a timestamp, because if it isn't, then it necessarily needs to follow the {juHDaq}.
qunnoq