no
evasive would be an adjective. Avoid is a verb
Avoidable is the adjective of avoid.
It is evasive, as in an evasive maneuver. It is descriptive of an attempt to avoid or escape something.
It can be. Shy is usually an adjective describing someone who is timid or introverted. But "to shy away from" means "to avoid," and in that sense, yes, it can be a verb.
divert, turn, deflect ward off, avoid, prevent, fend off, preclude, stave off, forestall
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
Avoidable is the adjective of avoid.
Avoidable
The closest adverb form is avoidably, from the derivative adjective avoidable.The verb avoid has the past participle adjective avoidedbut this does not have an adverb form.
The Inevitable student was trying to avoid the money order.
It is evasive, as in an evasive maneuver. It is descriptive of an attempt to avoid or escape something.
by using an article with an adjective as a noun
It can be. Shy is usually an adjective describing someone who is timid or introverted. But "to shy away from" means "to avoid," and in that sense, yes, it can be a verb.
Repelillo is commonly used in Puerto Rico as a slang. It is an adjective for "disgust", "try to avoid", "to repel", "to keep away of", etc.
The words trilogic and trilogical exist, but they are very rare and unidiomatic, and you would do well to avoid them. Offhand I can't think of any circumstance where you could not use the noun trilogy rather than a phrase such as trilogic work.
Yes, skirted is an Adjective. The word skirted is also a form of the verb to skirt (to lie along, to form a border or edge, or to avoid). Example uses:Adjective: I like the skirted suit better than the pantsuit.Verb: He skirted the issue and never actually answered the question.
divert, turn, deflect ward off, avoid, prevent, fend off, preclude, stave off, forestall
Yes, but it sounds like "officialese" which is unnecessarily wordy, pompous and oblique. Avoid is+adjective constructions generally, and use a verb instead: her report differs from his.