I'd probably use 'about', but I don't think it 'needs' either. "When asked to explain his whereabouts, Peter was evasive." or "Peter was evasive about where he had been, when he was asked."
It is more common to use "evasive about" to describe someone deliberately avoiding providing clear answers or information.
The base word of "evasive" is "evasion".
The word "evasive" is an adjective. It describes someone or something that avoids giving direct answers or responses.
The suspect was evasive during questioning, providing vague and contradictory answers to avoid revealing key information about the incident.
A good evasive answer could be, "I had a personal matter to attend to that couldn't be rescheduled." This answer doesn't provide specific details but still gives a reason for missing class.
No, it is not correct to say "back in home." The correct expression is "back home" or "back at home."
Evasive: ontwijkend Shady: louche
His answers where brief and evasive
Evasive Space happened in 2009.
The word 'evasive' is an adjective. An adjective does not have a plural form.Adjectives have a positive, comparative, and superlative form, for example:evasive (positive)more evasive (comparative)most evasive (superlative)
Evasive means te ndi ng to avoid or to escape.
Cunning, deceptive, evasive, indirect, misleading, slippery, vague
Evasive Space was created on 2009-02-16.
The origin of evasive is evade. This word meens to get away with or from something.
The word "evasive" is an adjective. It describes someone or something that avoids giving direct answers or responses.
He was very evasive when his wife asked him why he had lipstick on his collar.
Non-evasive is a misspelling of noninvasive. Non-evasive isn't a word. Noninvasive magnet closures are surface mount magnet contacts...
It is evasive, as in an evasive maneuver. It is descriptive of an attempt to avoid or escape something.