tergiversate
verb /ˈtɜːdʒɪvəseɪt/,  /ˌtɜːdʒɪˈvɜːseɪt/
  /tərˈdʒɪvərseɪt/,  /ˈtɜːrdʒɪvərseɪt/
(formal)Verb Forms
| present simple I / you / we / they tergiversate |  /ˈtɜːdʒɪvəseɪt/,  /ˌtɜːdʒɪˈvɜːseɪt/  /tərˈdʒɪvərseɪt/,  /ˈtɜːrdʒɪvərseɪt/ | 
| he / she / it tergiversates |  /ˈtɜːdʒɪvəseɪts/,  /ˌtɜːdʒɪˈvɜːseɪts/  /tərˈdʒɪvərseɪts/,  /ˈtɜːrdʒɪvərseɪts/ | 
| past simple tergiversated |  /ˈtɜːdʒɪvəseɪtɪd/,  /ˌtɜːdʒɪˈvɜːseɪtɪd/  /tərˈdʒɪvərseɪtɪd/,  /ˈtɜːrdʒɪvərseɪtɪd/ | 
| past participle tergiversated |  /ˈtɜːdʒɪvəseɪtɪd/,  /ˌtɜːdʒɪˈvɜːseɪtɪd/  /tərˈdʒɪvərseɪtɪd/,  /ˈtɜːrdʒɪvərseɪtɪd/ | 
| -ing form tergiversating |  /ˈtɜːdʒɪvəseɪtɪŋ/,  /ˌtɜːdʒɪˈvɜːseɪtɪŋ/  /tərˈdʒɪvərseɪtɪŋ/,  /ˈtɜːrdʒɪvərseɪtɪŋ/ | 
- [intransitive] to make statements that deliberately hide the truth or that avoid answering a question directly
- [intransitive] to remove your support from one person, group, or religion and begin to support another
Word Originmid 17th cent.: from Latin tergiversat- ‘with one's back turned’, from the verb tergiversari, from tergum ‘back’ + vertere ‘to turn’.