a. Also -evadeable, -evadible. (UN-1 7 b, 7, and 5 b.)
1839. De Quincey, Casuistry, Wks. 1862, VII. 272. The downright unevadable pressures of realities.
1857. Toulmin Smith, Parish, 367. Efficient action on this matter was formerly unevadible.
1869. Rossetti, Mem. Shelley, p. liv. [A] deadly, and, at last, unevadeable discovery.