[Grammar] How long does it take to....

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chingchangchong

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Hello, teachers.

What is the difference between "How long does it take to cook turkey" and "How long does it take to cooking turkey"

and Why?

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MikeNewYork

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The first is correct; the second is not. "To cook" is an infinitive. Infinitives use the base form of the verb, not the -ing form.
 

emsr2d2

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However, if you change the word order of the sentence, you can use "How long does cooking a turkey take?"
 

Tdol

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"How long does it take to cook turkey"
How long does it take to cook a turkey works better for me. Without the article, it could be any amount of turkey, which makes the question a bit pointless.
 

MikeNewYork

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Well, cooking times for turkeys vary by size. Often it is expressed as minutes per pound.
 
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chingchangchong

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Your sentence is too difficult to me.
But Thank you very much.
 

MikeNewYork

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Which sentence is too difficult?
 

Charlie Bernstein

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Tdol's, Emsr's, and Mike's comments are all correct. As they said:

- Cooking is not a simple verb. It's a gerund - an -ing verb. It is never part of an infinitive. We say "to cook," never "to cooking." To use the gerund, you have to rephrase, as Emsrl did.

- Turkey would be better with an article in front of it: a turkey.

Does that help? If you are still confused, maybe you will get more answers below. The important thing is: no gerunds after the word to!
 

emsr2d2

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...except in contexts like 'I prefer gardening to cooking'.

And in "I am to gardening what Beethoven is to clothes designing."
 

tzfujimino

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And in "I am to gardening what Beethoven is to clothes designing."

I like your example sentence.:-D
I think I'll use it when I teach that construction to my students.
Thank you.
 

emsr2d2

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Yes, that works too. There are always so many exceptions to our rules!
 
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