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The cacophony of New York is as overwhelming at times as its size. Nothing is small in this city. Everything is large, big and noisy, including its problems. Yet the city does not merely survive, it thrives. Having been a part of the fabric of this city, you will always carry its energy inside you, and the city will challenge you to do big things, to accomplish as much as you can, to work at bettering the world in every way you know how. Which sentence most clearly explains how Sotomayor uses metaphor in this passage? OA. By telling students that they are a part of the city and the city is a part of them, she is telling the graduates that living in New York has been a part of their education. B. With words like "overwhelming" and "large, big and noisy," Sotomayor paints a picture of New York that the graduates should be familiar with at this point in their education. C. Sotomayor tells students to "bask" in their education, which is another way of saying that students should appreciate the education they've received. D. The speaker ends the passage by calling on students to go out and make the most of the education they've received at New York University.​