It didn't work for me, but this is what Microsoft said.

Configure the spellchecker in Windows Mail
Follow these steps to access and customize the spell checking settings and 
options in Windows Mail:

  a.. Once you are inside Windows Mail, click on the Tools menu 
  b.. Choose "Options" 
  c.. When the Options dialog opens, click on the "Spelling" tab: this is where 
Windows Mail centralizes all available spell checking settings you can 
configure. 
  d.. The first option these accessible through the "Always check spelling 
before sending" checkbox: if checked, Windows Mail will not let you send an 
email message before warning you of any grammatical mistakes or spelling errors 
that may have caught. 
  e.. Windows Mail gives you access to spelling exceptions, listed under the 
"When checking spelling, always ignore" section:

  . If the "Words in UPPERCASE" checkbox is checked, the Windows Mail 
spellchecker will disregard any spelling issues found in uppercase words (like 
acronyms).

  . If "Words with numbers" is checked, it will likewise ignore words made in 
part of numbers (that are likely industry-specific words or technical jargon).

  . The "The original text in a reply or forward" checkbox is checked by 
default: by this, Windows Mail means that it will skip checking the spelling 
and grammar of emails you receive, or the portion of the email you send that 
you have not typed yourself when you reply to an email or forward it on to 
someone else.

  . Finally, the "Internet Addresses" is also checked by default; when it is 
enabled, Windows Mail will ignore Internet addresses that may contain word in 
its spell checker. 
  f.. The last spell checking option Windows Mail offers concerns language: it 
is by default set to your operating system's current language, but can be 
changed to one of the foreign language dictionaries that ship with Windows 
Mail: English, French (France), German (Germany), or Spanish (International 
Sort). 
  g.. Once you're done configuring the Windows Mail spellchecker, click on the 
OK button to accept the new settings, and return to your emails. 
These are all the options Windows Mail offers for checking the spelling of your 
messages; regardless of what you just configured, the new email window (what 
you see when you compose new emails, reply to an email, or forward an email) 
actually includes in its own spelling button so you can run the spellchecker 
even if you have disabled it by default.
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