noun, a single horse pulling a buggy
“The first day I went to high school, my father drove me down to the Village in a horse and buggy.”
“He’d come winter and summer, horse and cutter in the wintertime, horse and buggy in the summer.”
“Well, they travelled by horse and buggy, so they didn’t travel too far.”
“Like each section had a school, and then they’d have church because it was horse and buggy in those days, of course, and it was a lot closer.”
“Even when you went to church you went in a horse and buggy.”
“And it used to take them a day to drive down there with horse and buggy.”
“I remember my dad talking about it. There were sidewalks so they used to race horse and buggies up and down through the Village.”
“What was travel like, the roads and things like that when you were growing up?”
“Well, all gravel roads, eh. Horse and buggy. All gravel roads.”
“Well I wonder how my Uncle Len used to like telling tales about racing the horse and buggies up through the Village, and they would just fly over these walks.”
“I wonder whose horse and buggy that is.”
“By car, and horse and buggy, and horse and cutter in the wintertime.