no evasive would be an adjective. Avoid is a verb
A derivative adjective related to the noun evasion is evasive. (involves evasion)A similar adjective formed by the past participle of the verb evade is evaded. (performed evasion)
The adjective form for the noun evasion is evasive; the verb form is to evade.Adjective: When I asked him where he went last night, he gave me an evasive answer.Verb: Well, if he continues to evade your questions, he's not ready for a commitment.
Verb: Evade (Evaded, Evades, etc.) Adjective: Evasive Ex: To avoid is to evade. The ninja evaded the gaze of his enemy. Ex: To have the quality of avoidance is to be evasive. The evasive ninja completed his deed without a sound.
pre·var·i·cate/priˈvariˌkāt/Verb: Speak or act in an evasive way: "he prevaricatedwhen journalists asked questions".
His answers where brief and evasive
The word "evasive" is an adjective. It describes someone or something that avoids giving direct answers or responses.
It is more common to use "evasive about" to describe someone deliberately avoiding providing clear answers or information.
Evasive Space happened in 2009.
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.
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)
The suspect was evasive during questioning, providing vague and contradictory answers to avoid revealing key information about the incident.