You can say: having lunch, taking or having a lunch break, eating lunch, ordering takeaway lunch, ordering in pizza for lunch, going home to eat lunch, going out for lunch, having lunch in a cafe.
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By themselves, they sound strange. So "having lunch" or "to have lunch" would be better.
"He is taking his lunch elsewhere" - means that he took his lunch (the food) to some other place before eating.
"He is eating his lunch elsewhere" - means that he found another place where he can have eat his food.
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If I'm not mistaken, neither of them is correct. I would say "to have lunch"... But I'm not a native speaker..
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I think eating lunch is correct, and having lunch is also correct.
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1. eating lunch
2. taking lunch
3. having lunch
All three are fine.