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> "To be" is not the main verb in that sentence ["this can be a hassle"] so of course it's in infinitive form.

This directly conflicts with your earlier statement that

> The infinitive form of verbs in English always starts with "to", as in "to add", "to fix" etc.

That earlier statement is wrong, so contradicting it doesn't really present a problem, but you've left me pretty confused as to what you think you're saying.

Whether "be" is the "main verb" in that sentence is a more interesting question. There's a decent argument that it is, in that "this can be a hassle" is easily viewed as a modified form of the sentence "this is a hassle", but not as a modified form of the defective sentence "this can". But you're correct that the standard analysis just says that "this can be a hassle" is sentence where the subject is "this", the verb is "can", and the object is an infinitive clause.




I thought it went without saying that we're talking about main verbs because verbs in other positions don't change forms anyway.


    At this point, he has been being investigated for six months.
That sentence contains four verbs, of which zero are in the plain form. (One is present-3sg, one is ING-form, and two are EN-form.)

Are all four of them "main verbs"?




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