After Marco Rubio mocked a series of Donald Trump's tweets with multiple misspellings the GOP front-runner deleted the posts.

On Friday, Rubio went after Trump for misspelling the words 'lightweight', 'choker' and 'honor' in a Twitter attack against the Florida senator.

'Leightweight chocker Marco Rubio looks like a little boy on stage. Not presidential material!' Trump wrote, misspelling both 'lightweight' and 'choker.'

Donald Trump dashed off several anti-Marco Rubio tweets this morning, but he wasn't using spellcheck as both 'leightweight' and chocker' were misspelled

Spell check: After Rubio pointed out the series of errors, Trump went back and corrected his misspellings

Donald Trump used the term 'leightweight chocker' twice and misspelled it both times, while trying to attack fellow Republican Marco Rubio

Trump also fixed this tweet about Ted Cruz and his second misspelling of 'lightweight choker' later on

On the attack: Trump used a rally in Dallas to mock Trump over and over again, even suggesting that the billionaire

'Why would the people of Florida vote for Marco Rubio when he defrauded them by agreeing to represent them as their Senator and then quit!' Trump also wrote, blasting the senator, who isn't running for re-election because of the presidential race, for missing so many votes.

'Lying Ted Cruz and leightweight chocker Marco Rubio teamed up last night in a last ditch effort to stop our great movement. They failed!' Trump also tweeted, again failing to correctly spell the Rubio attack.

After Rubio made fun of the Donald, Trump went on to his twitter account, deleted the tweets and wrote up new posts spelled correctly.

'Lightweight choker Marco Rubio looks like a little boy on stage. Not presidential material!' the new tweet read.

Rubio's morning was filled with attacks on Trump on Friday.

Oops: Trump had another misspelling in this tweet accidentally spelling 'honor' as 'honer'

Later, After Rubio's attack about Trump's Twitter, he corrected this tweet, too, spelling 'honor' correctly

He even speculating that the billionaire had 'wet pants' during the Republican debate.

Fresh off last night's Republican debate stage, a newly feisty Rubio tried a new attack line against Trump, one which sounded remarkably similar in tone to the sort of rhetoric used by the billionaire.

Speaking at a rally Dallas, Rubio – who had his own bad debate moment in New Hampshire – read out tweets from Trump's account this morning, which accused the Florida senator of a 'meltdown'.

'Let me tell you something, during the debate last night he went backstage during one of the breaks, two of the breaks - he was having a meltdown,' Rubio told supporters.

'First he had this makeup thing, he was applying makeup around his mustache because he had one of those sweat mustaches.

'Then he asked for a full-length mirror. I don't know why because the podium goes up to here,' Rubio continued, motioning to his chest.

'Maybe to make sure his pants weren't wet,' the senator slyly suggested. 'I don't know.'

Marco Rubio did the morning show rounds today and used the term 'con artist' to whack Donald Trump during each interview

He also used a tour of the morning shows to attack Trump's integrity.

'We are not going to turn the conservative movement over to a con artist,' Marco Rubio said on the Today Show.

And on CBS This Morning. And on Good Morning America. In fact, Rubio used the term 'con artist' 12 times during his morning show lap.

'He has made a career sticking it to working Americans,' Rubio added on each show.

RUBIO ATTACKS! 'Let me tell you something, during the debate last night he went backstage during one of the breaks, two of the breaks - he was having a meltdown 'First he had this makeup thing, he was applying makeup around his mustache because he had one of those sweat mustaches. 'Then he asked for a full-length mirror. I don't know why because the podium goes up to here. 'Maybe to make sure his pants weren't wet. I don't know.' 'We are not going to turn the conservative movement over to a con artist.' 'He has made a career sticking it to working Americans.' 'He hired workers from Poland!' 'I saw you repeat yourself five times five seconds ago!' 'If he hadn't inherited $200 million, do you know where Donald Trump would be? Selling watches in Manhattan.' 'Then he asked for a full-length mirror. I don't know why because the podium goes up to here. Maybe to make sure his pants weren't wet.' Advertisement

And he claimed that he was himself the victim of some sort of media conspiracy to crown Trump the nominee so the Republicans lost the White House.

'The media is pumping him up as some unstoppable force,' Rubio said on CBS.

'The cover he's getting from the media these days is extraordinary,' Rubio said to George Stephanopoulos on ABC.

A new, more fiery, Rubio stepped on to last night's Republican debate stage ready to go to war with Trump as the Republican field had narrowed down to five.

This morning Rubio explained that the slimmer, trimmer field, along with the fact that Trump was dominating the race so far, let him to step up his attacks.

Trump fired back this morning using Twitter - but his tweets were littered with errors.

Hitting back, Rubio, according to Texas Tribune reporter Patrick Svitek, suggested that 'maybe he hires foreign workers to do his tweets.'

At the Dallas rally, the senator gleefully read them aloud.

'Let's read some, you'll have fun,' Rubio said, reading the most recent selections. 'A choker, I guess that's what he meant to say,' he laughed.

During the debate Rubio whacked Trump for hiring illegal immigrants, as opposed to Americans, which the Florida senator perceived as hypocritical for someone who has made illegal immigration the central focus of his campaign.

'I ... think that if you're going to claim that you're the only one who lifted this into the campaign,' Rubio said of immigration. 'That you acknowledge that you're the only person on this stage that's ever been fined for hiring to work on your projects illegally.'

'No, no, I'm the only one on the stage that's hired people. You haven't hired anybody!' Trump responded, while denying that he had ever broken immigration employment law.

'I've hired tens of thousands of people over at my job. You've hired nobody,' Trump fumed. 'You've had nothing but problems with your credit cards, et cetera. So don't tell me about that.'

That was a jab about a scandal involving Rubio's use of a Republican Party of Florida credit card for his personal expenses.

'You haven't hired one person, you liar!' he boomed.

'He hired workers from Poland. And he had to pay a million dollars or so in a judgment,' Rubio claimed.

'That's wrong. That's wrong. Totally wrong,' Trump insisted.

Ted Cruz made a simliar effort to sideline Trump but fell comparatively flat.

This morning Marco Rubio ridiculed Donald Trump for his flurry of anti-Rubio tweets that included several misspelled words

'You haven't hired one person, you liar!' Donald Trump insisted at one point during last night's Republican debate when Marco Rubio brought up that the billionaire had hired illegal immigrants from Poland

The Donald said he would deport millions of illegal immigrants but allow the 'good ones' to return through a screening process.

Cruz insisted he would be stricter.

'We have always welcomed legal immigrants, but I think it is a mistake to forgive those who break the law to allow them to become U.S. citizens, and that's why I've led the fight against granting citizenship to those here illegally,' he said.

He also blasted Trump for taking the issue of building a border wall as his own, saying he raised the idea in 2012.

'I really find it amazing that Donald believes that he is the one who discovered the issue of illegal immigration,' Cruz marveled.

'I can tell you, when I ran for Senate here in the state of Texas, I ran promising to lead the fight against amnesty, promising to fight to build a wall.'

'And in 2013, when I was fight against the "gang of eight" amnesty bill, where was Donald?' Cruz asked. 'He was firing Dennis Rodman on "Celebrity Apprentice".'

Meanwhile, Rubio continued to badger Trump on bad business dealings, including the defunct Trump University.

'If he hadn't inherited $200 million, do you know where Donald Trump would be? Selling watches in Manhattan!' he said.

Discussing Obamacare, Rubio tried to put the issue to bed that he was a 'robot,' a name he received after a poor debate performance in New Hampshire, in which he repeated rehearsed lines.

'Now he's repeating himself!' Rubio said, pointing at Trump, who kept saying his master health care plan would be to erase the 'lines around the states,' which would allow consumers to shop for the best health care plans nationally.

'No, I don't repeat myself! Here's a guy who repeats himself!' Trump shouted back.

'I watched him repeat himself five times four weeks ago,' The Donald recalled.

'I saw you repeat yourself five times five seconds ago!' Rubio jabbed.

IT WAS SO DOMINATED BY TRUMP-RUBIO THAT CARSON COMPLAINED Ben Carson had the least talk time during tonight's debate - and was furious. 'There was no attempt whatsoever to be equitable,' Carson told DailyMail.com after the CNN debate in Houston, Texas. 'Even Donald Trump himself said, "Please, ask somebody else questions!" Because, you know, they're looking for entertainment.' He told conservative radio show host Hugh Hewitt, a questioner: 'You said you're going to be fair to everybody, you didn't ask me about taxes. I had something to say about that.' Rubio, not Kasich, was actually second to last, according to the public radio station's tally 'Go ahead. This is your moment,' debate moderator Wolf Blitzer of CNN told him, allowing Carson to reply. That bought him some time, but Trump, Cruz and Rubio were back at it immediately after. 'Can somebody attack me, please?' Carson later begged, playing to traditional debate rules, which dictate that a candidate whose name is invoked has the right to a rebuttal. Some time later he tried to get back into the debate by proclaiming 'my name was mentioned' but his request was ignored, and he didn't push the point. Advertisement

o stave off any momentum Rubio might have seen from his night, Trump simply hearkened back to Rubio's less-than-stellar New Hampshire debate performance.

'The guy melted down in front of me,' Trump told reporters in the spin room.

'He was sweating so badly. He looked like he got out of a swimming pool. I've never seen anything quite like that,' the billionaire added.

'But one thing I know, from being an athlete: once a choke artist, always a choke artist. You never get better,' Trump added.

If Rubio's effort bears fruit at all, it will likely be in the next round of primary battles, which includes Florida and other 'winner-take-all' states.

March 15 marks the first date on which state Republican Party organizations can award delegates to the Republican National Convention in giant chunks to candidates who win by the slimmest of margins.

Polling suggests Trump is likely to win at least 9 state primaries on Tuesday. Cruz is ahead in Arkansas and in his home state of Texas.

Rubio's sole polling lead, according to surveys compiled by Real Clear Politics, is in Utah.

That state won't hold a primary until June. By then, Trump hopes to have salted away the delegates he needs to claim the GOP nomination.

Trump has attracted a rabid following of devoted supporters who turn out by the tens of thousands to hear him speak.

His populist message – 'politicians are all talk and no action' – is resonating and generating new interest in corners of the country not known for civic fervor.

Many of those places will hold elections on Tuesday.

The Drudge Report, an influential conservative news website, polled its readers in the aftermath of Thursday's debate and found rank-and-file Republicans preferred the bloodied Donald to the smug Marco.

Ninety minutes after the closing statements, 60 per cent of readers said Trump won the night. Cruz attracted 18 per cent.

And Rubio, for his shining moment,s got 14 per cent.

Ohio Governor John Kasich and retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson joined the troika of more realistic White House hopefuls and fired positive messages into the scrum, harmlessly bouncing off the part of the stage where most of the action was.

Asked a simple question about immigration policy, Kasich demonstrated why he likely won't be president.