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The phrase "difficult to arrange" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It is commonly used to describe something that is challenging or problematic to organize or put in order. Example: "Due to conflicting schedules and limited resources, it was difficult to arrange a meeting with all the key stakeholders."
Exact(60)
It is much more difficult to arrange.
This is difficult to arrange in fast-paced projects.
It is still difficult to arrange a trip.
That would not be too difficult to arrange; Microsoft owns a small stake in Apple.
Resource: Peer relationship can be just as valuable as mentorships (often difficult to arrange).
But it was difficult to arrange their lives around monthly visits, while keeping up with work and their children.
Private burials were difficult to arrange because many funeral directors either refused to handle AIDS corpses or charged higher fees.
I never got the opportunity to play back home; it was too difficult to arrange for anything.
It's more difficult to arrange a work visa for America, and travellers are still restricted to just a few organisations.
Axial-flux machines tend to have cooling difficulties since it is difficult to arrange continuous heat path between the stator stack and the frame.
So a conventional static load test would have been prohibitively costly and, also difficult to arrange in the available time and space.
More suggestions(17)
hard to arrange
tricky to arrange
difficult to organize
problematic to arrange
simple to arrange
harder to arrange
inconvenient to arrange
are to arrange
concerns to arrange
challenging to arrange
complicated to arrange
difficult to call
difficult to accept
difficult to do
difficult to change
difficult to stand
difficult to say
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