The verb 'fly' names one of the most extraordinary capacities in the natural world — movement through the air — and its etymology reveals that the Indo-European peoples understood this ability as a special case of a more general concept: flowing through a fluid medium.
Old English 'flēogan' was a Class II strong verb (flēogan/flēag/flugon/flogen), meaning 'to fly, to take flight, to move through the air.' The verb was used of birds, insects, arrows, and anything else that moved through the air, and it also appeared in figurative contexts — time flies, rumors fly, a person flies from danger. The noun 'fleoge' (fly, the insect) is derived from the verb: a fly is 'the flying thing,' named for its most characteristic action.
The Proto-Germanic form *fleuganą (to fly) is attested across the family: Old High German 'fliogan' (modern German 'fliegen'), Old Saxon 'fliogan,' Old Norse 'fljúga' (modern Icelandic 'fljúga,' Swedish 'flyga'), Old Frisian 'fliāga,' and Dutch 'vliegen.' All mean 'to fly' and descend regularly from the Proto-Germanic form.
The PIE root *plew- had the broad meaning 'to flow, to float, to swim, to fly.' The initial Germanic *fl- corresponds regularly to PIE *pl- (Grimm's Law converts PIE *p to Germanic *f). The root's semantic breadth is preserved in its reflexes across the Indo-European family. Latin 'pluere' (to rain) — source of English 'pluvial' — treats falling rain as flowing from the sky. Greek 'plein' (to sail
This semantic field reveals a conceptual world in which the boundaries between flying, floating, flowing, swimming, and sailing were fluid. All involved movement through a medium — air or water — and the PIE speakers evidently perceived these as variations on a single theme. The Germanic branch specialized the word for aerial movement, while other branches preserved the aquatic senses.
The strong verb conjugation of 'fly' has been mostly preserved: fly/flew/flown. The past tense 'flew' (from Middle English 'flew,' replacing Old English 'flēag') shows the Class II ablaut pattern, and the past participle 'flown' retains the '-n' suffix. However, there is a complication: the verb 'fly' meaning 'to hit a fly ball' in baseball uses the weak past tense 'flied' ('he flied out to center'), not 'flew.' This is an example of a general
The related word 'flight' (from Old English 'flyht') is the action noun corresponding to 'fly,' formed with the same abstract suffix seen in 'might' (from 'may'), 'sight' (from 'see'), and 'height' (from 'high'). The word 'fledge' — meaning to grow feathers sufficient for flight — comes from an Old English adjective meaning 'ready to fly' and is related to the same root. A 'fledgling' is literally a young bird that has just fledged.
The relationship between 'fly' and 'flee' is often assumed but actually uncertain. Old English 'flēon' (to flee, to escape) looks similar to 'flēogan' (to fly) and the two verbs influenced each other's forms in Middle English, leading to considerable confusion. Some scholars derive them from the same PIE root, arguing that flying and fleeing were conceived as the same act of rapid departure. Others treat them as originally distinct verbs that converged in form. The merger was
The word 'flea' (the jumping insect) is yet another possible relative, from Old English 'flēah' — named either for its ability to jump (as if flying) or derived from the 'flee' branch of the family (the insect that flees when you try to catch it). The phonological details are debated.
The twentieth century transformed the word 'fly' from a verb primarily associated with birds and insects to one central to human experience. The Wright brothers' achievement in 1903 made 'fly' a word for something people do, not just something birds do. The compound 'airplane' (or 'aeroplane'), the agent noun 'flyer/flier,' and expressions like 'fly-by-night,' 'flyover,' and 'no-fly zone' all reflect this expansion. The slang adjective 'fly' meaning 'stylish, attractive' — attested from the 1810s in British slang and