depends where you are, but generally you need to plan where you will abscond to, and have a plan for whatever resistance you may encounter. you need to have a getaway vehicle (best is a bicycle) and have it hidden and ready (you dont want it to break down 100 yards down the road) and you need to hide some supplies (food, drink, money, spare clothes (to change into so you wont fit the description given to the police when you are reported missing), and to have the escape planned. best time is at night or in a unusual circumstance. you will need a decoy, i.e a friend, or use a alarm to upset the usual routine, and when everyone's busy, that's the time to bolt! get to your supplies and bike and go!
The word abscond is a verb. The past tense is absconded.
So the strawberry blonde Did on Tuesday abscond
If you abscond past your maximum discharge date on probation, you may not be able to discharge from probation as you have violated the terms of your probation by absconding. It is advisable to contact your probation officer or legal counsel to discuss your situation and options.
escape or flee
Abscond.
Run away or abscond
Abscond means - to leave quickly and secretly and hide oneself, often to avoid arrest or prosecution. Absconded = past tense form. Here are some example sentences: At the very first opportunity, Jeb decided he would abscond from this hellhole and wait it out in the woods until nightfall. She absconded due to the fear of her mother. The secretary of the fund raising committee absconded with the money. The cashier absconded with the money. The cashier wanted to abscond. The thieves intended to abscond with several of the museum's most valuable paintings but failed. We will oppose bail; the accused has previously attempted to abscond while on bail. The secretary of knitting club absconded with the money. He will abscond with the entire payroll as soon as the bank releases it to him. Many of the biologists working on the top secret studies were worried that someone would abscond with their research. Probably some scientist did, in fact, leave the lab, taking others' ideas with them.
Run away or abscond
plunder steal abscond
The defendant decided to abscond from the courthouse before the trial.
avoid, abscond, cut and run, decamp, depart
The correct sentence construction is "Is he absconding?" Absconding is a verb used to describe the act of leaving secretly or hurriedly to avoid detection or arrest. "Is he an abscond" would not be a grammatically correct construction in this context.