From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishflyoverfly‧o‧ver /ˈflaɪ-əʊvə $ -oʊvər/ noun [countable] 1 British EnglishTTR a bridge that takes one road over another road SYN overpass American English2 American English a flight by a group of planes on a special occasion for people to watch SYN flypast British English
Examples from the Corpus
flyover• The A5 flyover is expected to be closed for up to a year.• They have also worked through the night when needed to - quite literally - put up new flyovers by the following morning.• They believe the flyover may have to be demolished.• On the flyover side, the building will be nine storeys high, declining to five storeys on its south side.• On New Year's night the poor huddled in primeval groups under the flyovers.