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In a dictionary, I find two example sentences of the use of "trick":

What's the trick to getting this chair to fold up?

On page 21, some tricks to speed up your beauty routine.

As we know, "to" can use be used as a preposition or as a word before an infinitive. When do we use it as a preposition and when as a word before an infinitive?

When "trick" can be followed by "to-infinitive" and "to" as a preposition, why is the first sentence "What is the trick to getting this chair to fold up" instead of "What is the trick to get this chair to fold up"? On the other hand, why is the second example "...some tricks to speed up your beauty routine", but not "..some tricks to speeding up your beauty routine"?

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3 Answers 3

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I've edited the title question (which appeared far too general and had been in part addressed on ELU before). There are a couple of particular usages involved in these specific examples.

'Is a trick to', like (the probably less informal) 'is a means to', can be followed by a present participial clause:

This imperative is derived from a causal 'law' ... that false promising is a means to getting ready money

[Online Guide to Ethics and Morality] ... and there are many hits on Google for "is a means to getting / achieving / making ..."

Other nouns are used in similar constructions: 'This is the key to understanding the issue.' There are over 7 million hits on Google for "is the key to understanding the".

.......

[W]hat is a trick to getting the best currency rate?

[Beth Allcock_Daily Express] ... and there are 140 000 hits on Google for "is a trick to getting".

'Is the trick to' is likewise idiomatic; for instance

Magic is the trick to understanding the mind.

[Durham University] (and 8 million hits on Google for "is the trick to").

Though modern analyses come down in favour of 'getting' in 'getting the best currency rate' (for example) being a verb (it does have a complement-or-whotsit now classed as a direct object), 'to' is classed as a preposition here.

..........................

Note that in the same Express article there is:

Brexit news: Currency expert reveals trick to avoid weak pound ...

There are a reasonable number of Google hits for "a trick to avoid having" and "a trick to speed up", over 1 1/2 million for "a trick to get", getting on for (now there's a fuzzy quantifier!) 2 million for "a trick to make" (but I expect a lot of false positives here). I'd class 'a trick to + infinitive' (and close variants like 'some tricks to') as idiomatic, given a sensible verb.

The 'to' here is the 'with the purpose/intended purpose of' [+ ing-form] usage, which I wouldn't class as the infinitive marker. The example given can be analysed as the remnant after deletion of 'On page 21, some tricks for you to speed up your beauty routine', which looks far more like a to-infinitive to usage. Compare '... a tool to extract staples with'.

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  • This is an interesting and useful answer. I would be happy to upvote it if you removed or revised the opening sentence, which seems, at its core, to be an argument for not posting an answer at all.
    – Sven Yargs
    Commented Aug 7, 2019 at 18:04
  • Did you really explain anything except quoting the examples from Google? Tautology.
    – Louis Liu
    Commented Aug 8, 2019 at 14:42
  • Didn't you read the " 'to' is classed as a preposition here" and " The 'to' here is the 'with the purpose/intended purpose of' [+ ing-form] usage, which I wouldn't class as the infinitive marker"? BillJ gives the CGEL stance. Commented Aug 8, 2019 at 17:37
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[1] What's the trick to [getting this chair to fold up]?

[2] some tricks [to speed up your beauty routine].

If clause is of the -ing type, then the preceding "to" is a preposition, and if the clause is an infinitival then "to" is a subordinator serving as a marker within the clause.

Thus "to" is a preposition in [1] and a subordinator in [2]

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  • you think I don't know it?
    – Louis Liu
    Commented Aug 8, 2019 at 14:37
  • @LouisLiu Then why ask? It's a simple enough point of grammar
    – BillJ
    Commented Aug 8, 2019 at 15:39
  • @LouisLiu And note that gerund-participial clauses do not function as complement in NP structure, hence only your second example is OK.
    – BillJ
    Commented Aug 8, 2019 at 15:45
  • @LouisLiu We say: You think I don't know that?
    – Lambie
    Commented Aug 8, 2019 at 16:57
  • The title was edited, the original title was slightly different: What is the difference between "to" as a preposition and as part of "to-infinitive"?
    – Mari-Lou A
    Commented Aug 8, 2019 at 17:46
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Some nouns + get mean achieve or obtain can be used like this:

  • The trick to getting this chair to fold is [x]
  • The solution to getting these voters to turn out is [x]
  • The answer to getting more people at the park is [x]

get x to means: to obtain or achieve or persuade

  • Getting people to understand you can be difficult.
  • Getting better quality/price ratios is very hard.

I would say that the idiomatic usage is: Get x [direct object] to [verb] with or without a direct object.

To here is a preposition after a noun. Some nouns take to: the solution to, the way to, the answer to, the trick to, the solution to, etc.

Cambridge Dictionary, to after a noun

"To as a preposition: after nouns A number of nouns are followed by to. These include nouns expressing direction or destination such as door, entrance, road, route, way:"

One could consider that the word trick is a "direction or destination". In any event, the noun trick "takes" to.

So the grammar here is two things:

  • the [x] to [to follows certain nouns, it is a preposition
  • getting x to y, a noun phrase or clause that means: making it so that there is some outcome.

Get x to y is the idiom.

On page x, some tricks to speed up your beauty routine is short-hand for: - On page x, [there are] some tricks to speed up your beauty routine.

That kind of shortening is allowed in certain types of advertorial-type writing. That said, it ain't great.

Obviously, that is the function usage of to signal a purpose.

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  • pls read the question carefully. The mention of "get x to y" is irrelevant here.
    – Louis Liu
    Commented Aug 8, 2019 at 14:43
  • @LouisLiu You are mistaken. Your phrase contains getting this chair to fold. getting this chair to fold is the gerund form for the bare infintive: get x to y. You need to pay closer attention to how this works. Maybe you can learn something from me by reading my answer more carefully and understanding the parse here. And I repeat: Some nouns take certain prepositions. The noun trick takes to. This fully answers your question and it is documented. Next?
    – Lambie
    Commented Aug 8, 2019 at 14:59
  • No you still have explained why in "On page x, [there are] some tricks to speed up your beauty routine", "to" is followed by an infinitive but not a gerund when you say "to" is a preposition.
    – Louis Liu
    Commented Oct 31, 2021 at 12:58
  • @LouisLiu One is a to-infinitive and the other is an idiom: the trick to doing something. They both use the preposition to.
    – Lambie
    Commented Oct 31, 2021 at 14:37

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