Disjunction in
natural languages does not precisely match the interpretation of \lor in classical logic. Notably, classical disjunction is inclusive while natural language disjunction is often understood exclusively, as the following English example typically would be. :* Mary is eating an apple or a pear. This inference has sometimes been understood as an
entailment, for instance by
Alfred Tarski, who suggested that natural language disjunction is
ambiguous between a classical and a nonclassical interpretation. More recent work in
pragmatics has shown that this inference can be derived as a
conversational implicature on the basis of a
semantic denotation which behaves classically. However, disjunctive constructions including
Hungarian vagy... vagy and
French soit... soit have been argued to be inherently exclusive, rendering un
grammaticality in contexts where an inclusive reading would otherwise be forced. Similar deviations from classical logic have been noted in cases such as
free choice disjunction and
simplification of disjunctive antecedents, where certain
modal operators trigger a
conjunction-like interpretation of disjunction. As with exclusivity, these inferences have been analyzed both as implicatures and as entailments arising from a nonclassical interpretation of disjunction. :* You can have an apple or a pear. ::\rightsquigarrow You can have an apple and you can have a pear (but you cannot have both) In many languages, disjunctive expressions play a role in question formation. :* Is Mary a philosopher or a linguist? For instance, while the above English example can be interpreted as a
polar question asking whether it's true that Mary is either a philosopher or a linguist, it can also be interpreted as an
alternative question asking which of the two professions is hers. The role of disjunction in these cases has been analyzed using nonclassical logics such as
alternative semantics and
inquisitive semantics, which have also been adopted to explain the free choice and simplification inferences. In English, as in many other languages, disjunction is expressed by a
coordinating conjunction. Other languages express disjunctive meanings in a variety of ways, though it is unknown whether disjunction itself is a
linguistic universal. In many languages such as
Dyirbal and
Maricopa, disjunction is marked using a verb
suffix. For instance, in the Maricopa example below, disjunction is marked by the suffix
šaa. {{interlinear|| lang=mrc|indent=3|ablist=INFER:inferential ==See also==