A friend of mine told me that he heard on TV (a show) the expression written in the title. The context would be something like:
Neither him nor I found it on any website or in any dictionary. I also checked COCA but there's no sign of it. Does anybody know what it could mean?"Where's Sam?"
"He flowed on high."
"Damn!"
In case he heard it wrong, here is a possible interpretation: to leave (rather to run) (the house) early in the morning.
Last edited by SirGod; 02-Nov-2011 at 21:30.
Could it have been flew rather than flowed? That would give the idea of leaving, though on high still doesn't work IMO.
As Tdol wrote, 'on high' still doesn't work, but he flew could just mean that he left.
Unless it's a euphemistic way of saying 'he died', using the language of the King James Bible - as a certain kind of believer tends to do.(
There is a similar - rather touching, I think - usage in the (maritime) song Tom Bowling; 'Tom is gone aloft' ('going aloft', in the context of sailing ships, meant 'going to a precarious look-out point - often the "crow's nest"'; but in the song it means 'He is dead'.)
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I am sorry for reviving such an old thread, but I have one more question. "High" could be a shortened version of "highway", right? And if my friend misheard flew or fled for flowed, it could make sense ("flew/fled on high"), couldn't it?
Ok, now it is all clear to me, I just wanted to run this by a teacher to satisfy my curiosity. Thank you!