Answer:
Malas:
malísimas or muy malas
Muy alta is the superlative of alta
Explanation:
Uhm o his brotherndjdndjjsjsks
<h3>A) Agudas: </h3>
- Adiós
- Buzón
- Nariz
- Oración
- Almacén
- Champú
- Inglés
- País
- Razón
<h3>B) Llanas: </h3>
- Abierto
- Batería
- Policía
- Alguien
- Caída
- Difícil
- Rascacielos
- Árbol
- Concierto
<h3>C) Esdrújulas: </h3>

Remember that words can be classified by the stressed vowel into agudas, llanas and esdrújulas.
- In agudas, the stressed syllable falls on the <u>last syllable</u>.
- In llanas, the tonic syllable falls on the <u>penultimate syllable</u>.
- In esdrújulas, the stressed syllable falls on the <u>antepenultimate syllable</u>.
<h3>It is accentuated when:</h3>
- <u>Agudas</u>: It is accentuated when the last syllable ends in "-n", "-s" or a vowel.
- <u>Llanas</u>: It is accentuated when the last syllable does NOT end in "-n", "-s" or a vowel.
- <u>Esdrújulas</u>: It is always accentuated.
There are also sobreesdrújula that is to say that the stressed syllable falls before the antepenultimate syllable. They are <u>always</u> accentuated.