'Sunny spells' is like saying 'sunny periods' - it means it will be sunny for short periods of time throughout the day.
The answer depends on what the forecast was about and how you interpret accurate. Consider weather forecasts. If the weather forecast was "sunny", how much cloud cover is acceptable before the forecast is considered wrong? If the forecast was "dry" would a 5 second drizzle mean a total *FAIL*? Does "rainy" range from a fleeting drizzle to a tropical downpour? Also, if the forecast for a region was sunny, and it was sunny in 95% of the region, but in 5% of the region it was not sunny for 5 minutes, does that count as a failure? It is critically important that all forecast terms are unambiguous and that all thresholds are very clearly defined. Similar considerations will apply in forecasts of other unknowns.
yes it does mean sunny hills
I think you mean extradite - and the answer is it depends on the severity of the offense, whether there is an open warrant and what that warrant spells out.
"Hay sol" is "there is sun" or "it is sunny." Sol can also mean sunny.
Yes, if by sunny you mean sunfish.
"Sunny hill"
sunny
Loss of consciousness
Manpower demand forecast refers to how many employees you project you will need at a future date. This is often times driven by whether or not the company is projecting an increase or decrease in production of their product or service. The less a company is projecting to produce, the less employees or "manpower" they will need to produce it.
If by Aphrodite's spells you mean resist love, the virgin goddesses Hestia, Artemis, and Athena.
CBF = Container Booking Forecast
It Mean Fire Creatures, Nexuses, and Spells