The sentence "I arrived exactly at their cut off time" is not correct grammar because of the wrong diction used.
"When is the best time I can call you?" is correct.
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
You should say "arrived exactly at" instead of "exactly arrived on" and include a subject for the verb. The rest is correct.
No, there is no subject. Who arrived?"Bob and Sara arrived exactly at their cut off time.""They arrived exactly at their cut off time."Arrived exactly at their cut off time is not a correct grammar.
Arrived exactly at their cut off time is not correct grammar. It is a sentence fragment.A grammatically correct sentence would be, "They [or "The widgets we needed to complete the oscillating framizam" or whatever] arrived exactly at their cutoff [not cut off] time."
Arrived 2 minutes before their cut off time is not a correct grammar.
Made it exactly at 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.
No, "Is she and you arrived at the airport on time" is not correct. It should be "Did she and you arrive at the airport on time?" or "Did she and you both arrive at the airport on time?" for proper subject-verb agreement.
"When is the best time I can call you?" is correct.
It's nice spending time with my husband. other than the apostrophe in the first word, the grammar was correct.
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.
Better = 'Both of you arrived at the airport..."