ensign
A flag flown upside down is an official signal of distress. A flag flown at half mast, is a mark of respect or mourning.
The Navy uses the term "Ensign" to refer to their flag. An Ensign is a flag that signifies the nationality of a vessel and is typically flown at the stern.
I would say, all the airfields in southern England, because even those airfields that were not being used directly by forces going to France, such as the Coastal Command airfields, would still have flown anti-submarine and ASV patrols.
May 20, 1902.
1999
Jack
The Ensign shows the country of registry of the vessel and indicates its nationality.
A flag is flown at half-mast to indicate a death.
Any aircraft flown by opposition forces was the enemy aircraft. Without knowing which country you are refering to, it is not possible to list the airplanes.
it was flown in 2014
Certainly, there is no reason not to fly it. Men and women in the US armed forces stationed in Iraq commonly purchase US flags which are flown at their base, which they then donate, along with a certificate stating when and where the flag was flown, to individuals, schools and organizations back home, as a token of appreciation for their support. The flags themselves have no special status; it is the acknowledgement that is significant. As long as the flag is cared for properly, flying it in public is just as good a way of making use of the gift as keeping it folded up in a glass box bolted to the wall--perhaps better. However, the flags are a bit too small for some flagpoles, so schools usually just put them on display.
1912 was when the first helicopter flown
I/You/We/They have flown. He/She/It has flown.
descended? Driven (in a car, as opposed to flown in a plane). Walked (as opposed to having flown somewhere.)
It is flown in reverse to signal distress.
Bird Has Flown was created in 1969.
The Eagle Has Flown was created in 1991.