Here the word "spell" is used to mean "fill in for me" or "cover my job", as in "relieve me for a spell" meaning a short period.
The latin phrase De minimis may be what you mean.
If you mean the country, you would spell it Portugal.
The word "thereafter" is one word, mean from that point in time on (related to hereafter and henceforth)."He had cheated, and thereafter he would not be trusted."The only time the words would be used separately would be as separate adverbs, there (location) and after(afterward, or in a phrase)."He went there after the game."
It means that even if you were offered some kind of candy (or your favourite treat), you still wouldn't be able to spell words. (A related idiom in the US is that you "can't spell for beans", which has no specific meaning.)
Here the word spell does not mean spelling, or to cast a wizard's spell, although it may have derived from the same words. A "spell" is just an unspecified period of time, and a "sunny spell" would indicate several days of good weather, rather than having a "rainy spell".
If you mean the phrase itself, transliterated/Japanized, it would be : スウィートドリームス : suiito doriimusu. If you want to say sweet dreams to someone in Japanese, a good phrase for it would be 'ii yume wo'.
The latin phrase De minimis may be what you mean.
"I griega" is the Spanish term for the letter "Y" in the alphabet. It is called "i griega" because in Spain, the letter "Y" is pronounced like the "i" sound.
If you mean the phrase itself, transliterated/Japanized, it would be : スウィートドリームス : suiito doriimusu. If you want to say sweet dreams to someone in Japanese, a good phrase for it would be 'ii yume wo'.
Cowboys loved a colorful phrase! A spell was a time, for awhile. "Sit a spell," was a cowboy invitation to join them.
If you mean the country, you would spell it Portugal.
I don't know what you mean by spell, but it would be kuroi bara. Kuroi is the adjective form of black and bara means rose.
"Cómo se deletrea" means "How is it spelled?" in English. It is a question asking for the correct sequence of letters to spell a word or phrase.
It depends on what the rest of the phrase said. "Everything under the sun" is a figurative way of saying "everything," while "under the sun" alone would mean out in the sunlight.
The word "thereafter" is one word, mean from that point in time on (related to hereafter and henceforth)."He had cheated, and thereafter he would not be trusted."The only time the words would be used separately would be as separate adverbs, there (location) and after(afterward, or in a phrase)."He went there after the game."
If you mean how does one spell 'serious' using chatspeak, that would be SRS.
It means that even if you were offered some kind of candy (or your favourite treat), you still wouldn't be able to spell words. (A related idiom in the US is that you "can't spell for beans", which has no specific meaning.)