Answer:
"She dressed plainly because she could not dress well, but she was unhappy as if she had really fallen from a higher station..." I think this is a good example of foreshadowing because it is saying that she is so unhappy as if she had fallen down from a higher station, but she really will fall down and she doesn't even see it coming. When they went to the jeweler, but he said that he didn't make it which foreshadowed that it was fake.
Miserable is an extreme form of being sad.
<span>Exhausted is an extreme form of being tired.</span>
To identify which syllable is stressed in a word, one must listen to it. A stressed syllable is that which is louder, longer and said in a higher pitch than the other syllables in a word.
In the word “thirsty,” the stress falls in the syllable “<u>thris</u>”
In “guru,” the stress falls in the first syllable too: “<u>gu</u>”
Lastly, in the word “mastery,” the stressed syllable is “<u>mas</u>”
Another way to find out which syllable is stressed is by learning some general rules (although they can not be applied to all words). One of those general rules, for example, is that most two-syllable nouns and adjectives (such as “guru” and “thirsty”) are usually stressed in the first syllable.