Use the passage to answer the question.

Nueva York is the city of commotion and mobility. The noise can be so intense that it numbs the senses, and the person who lives in this environment for a long time loses the notion of silence. The torrent of pedestrians and vehicles is endless—streetcars, buses, automobiles, horse-carts, trucks, trains, bicycles, motorcycles, airplanes and wheelbarrows; fire engines, with their high-powered motors and ear-splitting sirens; the shouts of children and adults; the buzz of conversation of the human swarm on the sidewalks; guffaws, curses, cries; the explosion of a backfiring engine; wheels that bump over the rails and rend all tranquility; the spinning of propellers boring thunderously through space; noise, noise, NOISE: New York.

Question
Which type of figure of speech is used in this excerpt?

Select the two correct answers.

(1 point)
Responses

paradox
paradox

hyperbole
hyperbole

personification
personification

understatement
understatement

metaphor
metaphor

1 answer

The two correct answers for the type of figure of speech used in this excerpt are:

  • hyperbole
  • personification

The excerpt uses hyperbole in the exaggerated description of noise in New York, emphasizing its overwhelming intensity. It also employs personification when attributing human-like qualities to the city and its noise, suggesting that the noise itself defines New York.