Definition
The movable surfaces on an aircraft that control its rotation around the three axes of flight: ailerons (roll, around the longitudinal axis), elevator or stabilator (pitch, around the lateral axis), and rudder (yaw, around the vertical axis). These surfaces are required for safe control of the aircraft and are operated directly by the pilot through the control yoke or stick and the rudder pedals.
Plain English
The three sets of moving panels a pilot uses to steer the aircraft in flight: one set tips the wings, one set raises or lowers the nose, and one set swings the nose left or right.
Context Anchor
Seen in flight control system descriptions, preflight control checks, and basic maneuver training.
Derivation
Primary means 'first in importance.' These are called primary because they are the controls the pilot must have to fly the aircraft. The other surfaces (flaps, trim tabs, spoilers) are called secondary because they assist or refine flight, but flight is not possible without the primary set.
Why Pilots Care
These are the surfaces the pilot directly commands to change direction and attitude; without them the airplane cannot be flown under control.
Grounding Statement
When the pilot moves the control wheel, stick, or rudder pedals, the primary flight control surfaces move into the airflow and make the airplane respond.
Intuition Check
Primary does not mean these are the only controls on the airplane. It means they are the basic controls used to directly control the airplane’s main movements in flight.
Example Sentence 1
During the walkaround, the pilot checked each of the primary flight control surfaces for free and correct movement.
Example Sentence 2
During preflight the instructor pointed out how each primary flight control surface moves when the cockpit controls are deflected.