Edit 'translate/figs-infostructure/01.md' using 'tc-create-app'
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@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ Beaucoup d'autres langues placent normalement ces choses dans un ordre différen
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Toutes les langues assignent un ordre normal aux parties d'une phrase. Mais, cet ordre peut changer en fonction des informations que le locuteur ou l'écrivain considère les plus importantes.
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Suppose that someone is answering the question, “What did Peter paint yesterday?” The person asking the question already knows all of the information in our sentence above except for the object, “his house.” Therefore, that becomes the most important part of the information, and a person answering in English might say “His house is what Peter painted (yesterday).”
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Suppose that someone is answering the question, “What did Peter paint yesterday?” The person asking the question already knows all of the information in our sentence above except for the object, “his house.” Therefore, that becomes the most important part of the information, and a person answering in English might say “His house is what Peter painted (yesterday).”
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This puts the most important information first, which is normal for English. Many Other Languages would normally put the most important information last. In the flow of a text, the most important information is usually what the writer considers to be new information for the reader. In some languages the new information comes first, and in others it comes last.
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