the bird has flown
the
ðə
dhē
bird
bɜ:d
bēd
has
hæz
hāz
flown
fləʊn
flewn

Definition & Meaning of "the bird has flown"in English

the bird has flown
01

said to mean that a person that one looks for has fled or left 

the bird has flown definition and meaning
Idiom
Informal

What is the origin of the idiom "the bird has flown" and when to use it?

The idiom "the bird has flown" originated from the practice of falconry, where a trained bird of prey, like a falcon, was used to hunt. If the prey managed to escape or fly away before the falcon could catch it, the falconer would say "the bird has flown." This phrase then evolved figuratively to describe situations where a person being sought after has eluded capture or disappeared, conveying the notion that target has escaped.

Examples
By the time the police arrived, the bird had flown. 
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