"When is the best time I can call you?" is correct.
The sentence "I arrived exactly at their cut off time" is not correct grammar because of the wrong diction used.
Meet with Scott and I
in the celebration of love of a life time
What time is it by your watch is the correct way to say your answer and not what time is it on your watch as that would be incorrect grammar.
Depends on the context of the sentence, but yes, most of the time
Made it exactly at their cut off time is not a correct grammar.
It's nice spending time with my husband. other than the apostrophe in the first word, the grammar was correct.
Arrived 2 minutes before their cut off time is not a correct grammar.
Got in at 2 minutes before their cut off time is not a correct grammar.
Got in at 2 minutes before their cut off time is not a correct grammar.
The correct phrase is "What time is it?" This is the typical word order for asking about the current time in English.
The sentence "I arrived exactly at their cut off time" is not correct grammar because of the wrong diction used.
Got here in 2 minutes before their cut off time is not a correct grammar.
Arrived at two minutes before their cut off time is not a correct grammar.Is arrived at two minutes before their cut off time is not a correct grammar.
That sentence is grammatically correct.
The phrase "you and me" is not grammatically correct in traditional grammar. When referring to the subject of a sentence, it should be "you and I." However, in informal speech or certain contexts, "you and me" is commonly used.
It is, but it is not conventional English syntax or grammar.