You can make the things easy which you find it hard to do.
Should I use it in sentence above? What I want to say is that There are things and I found doing things hard and ı want to make things easier. I though “it” modifies “ to do” .
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Sign up to join this communityThe pronoun it
is not necessary here, it makes the sentence non-grammatical. If it did occur in that position, it would not modify to do
, but would be an object of the clause which references the things
.
Also, the word order is incorrect. Instead, say:
You can make the things which you find hard to do easier.
it
is the object of find
there, in a primary SVO clause. On the other hand, which you find hard to do
is an adjective clause, it does not take a separate subject but refers to the things
by its place in the sentence. (edit: it looks like you deleted your comment asking about "did he find it easy to write?", but I will leave my reply here anyway!)
You can make the things which you find to hard to do easy.
is correct grammar. A speaker would place a little pause in between do
and easy
if saying that, so that hard
and easy
don't "crash". It sounds as if there is a comma, but do not write a comma.