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Flown

Flown is the past participle of the verb fly. It is used with auxiliary verbs to form the perfect tenses (has flown, have flown, had flown) and in passive constructions to indicate that something has been transported by air (for example, The goods were flown to the capital). The verb fly is irregular in its simple past and past participle forms: fly, flew, flown.

In modern English, flown most often appears in contexts involving air travel or transport. It can describe

As a grammatical form, flown contrasts with the present participle flying and with the simple past flew.

completed
movement
through
the
air
or
act
as
part
of
a
passive
clause
describing
air
transportation.
For
instance,
a
traveler
has
flown
to
a
destination,
or
a
relief
shipment
was
flown
to
a
disaster
zone.
Flown
can
also
appear
in
aviation-related
phrases
or
reports
about
routes
and
logistics,
where
the
emphasis
is
on
the
fact
that
the
item
or
person
has
already
traveled
by
air.
Flying
denotes
ongoing
action
or
general
ability,
while
flown
indicates
a
completed
flight
or
a
state
resulting
from
air
travel.
Because
fly
is
irregular,
speakers
rely
on
the
distinct
forms
fly,
flew,
and
flown
to
convey
tense
and
voice
accurately.
In
formal
or
written
English,
correct
usage
of
flown
helps
convey
completed
air
movement
within
compound
tenses
or
passive
constructions.