Dodge in a sentence as a noun

We got knocked out cold in dodge ball.

Might dodge the issue for a while, but when they find out they'd be even more pissed.

" complaint in the middle of a "My tax dodge is inconvenient!

The other mod made missiles follow slightly wider turning arcs, so they were harder to dodge by going around corners.

"That shot into that tunnel is a sure ****" turns into "that shot is unlikely to hit"; "I can dodge that" turns into "I have no option but to run".

Yes, you could throw up a smokescreen and dodge out of the spotlight cast on your bad science today, but that will only be a momentary reprieve of the pain.

Dodge in a sentence as a verb

When you visit the Metropolitan Museum, you're basically seeing the benefits of a tax dodge.

Any american-based VPN company should be assumed to be a honeypotuse it to dodge your ISP, not governments.

But you needed a special programmer to do that, and to erase it, you had to get rid of those charges so you literally shined an ultraviolet light thru the window and the photons kicked the electrons right out of dodge.

* If you ruthlessly constrain the features of a natural language-like programming language, it's possible that you can keep the advantage of human readability and dodge the disadvantage of the "uncanny valley", as `antihero` succinctly put it.

Just flinging around wild accusations of racism at Google, this company, and finally society as a whole, without giving any action items on how one would discharge the accusation of racism is just being mean, hitting people with a very big stick without giving them any chance to dodge.

Dodge definitions

noun

an elaborate or deceitful scheme contrived to deceive or evade; "his testimony was just a contrivance to throw us off the track"

See also: contrivance stratagem

noun

a quick evasive movement

noun

a statement that evades the question by cleverness or trickery

See also: dodging scheme

verb

make a sudden movement in a new direction so as to avoid; "The child dodged the teacher's blow"

verb

move to and fro or from place to place usually in an irregular course; "the pickpocket dodged through the crowd"

verb

avoid or try to avoid fulfilling, answering, or performing (duties, questions, or issues); "He dodged the issue"; "she skirted the problem"; "They tend to evade their responsibilities"; "he evaded the questions skillfully"