bird has flown, the



bird has flown, the

The individual sought has gone away, as in Jean hoped to meet her editor at long last, but when she arrived the bird had flown. This idiom has been used for an escaped prisoner, and more generally, as in 1655 by William Gurnall ( The Christian in Complete Armour): "Man ... knows not his time ... he comes when the bird is flown." [Mid-1600s]
See also: bird

Common Names:

NameGenderPronouncedUsage
Uaithne-Irish
Vibiana-Ancient Roman
Amerigoah-me-REE-goItalian
SoffÍA-Icelandic
Shakir-Arabic
Rudolph['ru:dɔlf]