fly the coop

Related to fly the coop: Time Flies, flown the coop, flies in the face, bygones

fly the coop

To leave or escape (something). This lecture is so boring. Come on, let's fly the coop and go get a drink somewhere! I'm definitely flying the coop when I turn 18—I can't wait to have a little freedom!
See also: coop, fly
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

fly the coop

Fig. to escape; to get out or get away. (Alludes to a chicken escaping from a chicken coop.) I couldn't stand the party, so I flew the coop. The prisoner flew the coop at the first opportunity.
See also: coop, fly
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.

fly the coop

Escape, run away, as in After years of fighting with my mother, my father finally flew the coop. This term originally meant "escape from jail," known as the coop in underworld slang since the late 1700s. [Late 1800s]
See also: coop, fly
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.

fly the coop

If someone flies the coop, they leave the situation that they are in, often because they want to have more freedom or want to do something different. Aged 21, I felt the time was right to fly the coop and my parents were okay about it. It should be a proud moment, junior hairwasher grows up, graduates to senior stylist and then flies the coop to set up in a salon of his or her own. Compare with fly the nest. Note: A coop is a small cage in which chickens or small animals are kept. `Coop' is also American slang for a prison.
See also: coop, fly
Collins COBUILD Idioms Dictionary, 3rd ed.

fly the coop

make your escape. informal
1991 Julia Phillips You'll Never Eat Lunch In This Town Again Has David left? Nah, he would want to make sure I'm really ensconced, or I might fly the coop.
See also: coop, fly
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary

fly the ˈcoop

(informal, especially American English) escape from a place: He was never happy living at home with his parents, so as soon as possible he flew the coop and got his own place.
A coop is a cage for chickens, hens, etc.
See also: coop, fly
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary

fly the coop

tv. to escape from somewhere; to get away. I was afraid he would fly the coop if I didn’t tie him up.
See also: coop, fly
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions

fly the coop, to

To escape. This expression, with its analogy to barnyard fowl escaping from a chicken coop or other enclosure, is American in origin and dates from about 1900. “On the third day I flew the coop,” wrote O. Henry (The Enchanted Profile, 1909). More recently Harry Kemelman used it in Saturday the Rabbi Went Hungry (1966): “This man ran off . . . flew the coop, beat it.”
See also: fly
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
See also:
  • fly the coop, to
  • blow the coop
  • coop
  • coop up
  • dip out
  • hen fruit
  • burg
  • one-horse town
  • a one-horse town
  • extreme
References in periodicals archive
They fly the coop every year to dodge a council's summons servers.
If we go by western standards, her daughter is 10 years past her due date to fly the coop and be independent.
THERE will be no 'Chicken' on the Wigan menu next season because George Carmont has decided to fly the coop.
It made sense that "Trace," the 10 o'clock show coming out of the megahit "CSI," would be the one to fly the coop.
HUNDREDS of pigeons are to fly the coop in aid of cancer care in Solihull.
All three still live at home, but yearn to fly the coop. Nip/Tuck Sky One, 10.00pm SEAN and Christian take an exam they must pass if they are to continue practising, as the drama series about the Miami plastic surgeons continues.
The winner will receive a "Fly the Coop" weekend getaway to Timberline Lodge along with $100 and a year's supply of chicken (up to 52 birds).
You can usually trust your 83-year-old mother to stick with you, but even she is going to fly the coop and watch the rugby, though I have informed her I won't be impressed if I return to find her fast asleep, surrounded by empty beer cans and with her face painted in the cross of St George.
Should the two of them fly the coop so Derek can become a born- again sex bomb?
The Bosman ruling means a second Well international star is ready to fly the coop for NOWT, with Lambert poised to deal the killer blow as he arrives back in Dortmund for a critical week's training.
Sombero is but the latest high-profile suspect to fly the coop; earlier there was the alleged drug lord Peter Lim, and then Jack Lam, who is accused of illegal online gambling and human trafficking activities.
The Rovers manager dismissed rumours the chicken-breeding Rao family would fly the coop at the first sign of trouble.
After a mock moral ending neatly skewering the uplifting virtues of truth, pic opts for full-scale escape from absurdist concerns of bourgeois respectability as Kai and Annika fly the coop.
Those downmarket tabloids willing to pay big bucks to the first housemates to get it on have just seen their chances of that fly the coop with Anouska.
Based on the premiere, Cooper has roughly 3.9 years to go before he can fly the coop. And while "The Days" isn't bad, it's hard to imagine that day ever coming.