horse and cutter

noun, a single horse pulling a cutter

“He’d come winter and summer, horse and cutter in the wintertime, horse and buggy in the summer.

“Tom drove the horse and cutter from here up to there.”

“He phoned, and he had all the pictures pretty well he needed, but he wanted to get a horse and cutter.”

“By car, and horse and buggy, and horse and cutter in the wintertime.

“The one winter when the snow was bad (the roads weren’t plowed, of course, in those days), Tom drove the horse and cutter from here up to there.”

“Tom and we were neighbours, and he picked me up with a horse and cutter. And we went to where Sarah lives now, put the horse in the stable.”

“Did you dance right through the winter?”
“Well, unless you couldn’t get out. But in those days, you could always go because it was horse and sleigh or horse and cutter.”

“They only had like two snowplows at that time, two old snowplows, and there’s no way that they could ever keep the roads going for a little while anyway. And everybody went on their horse and sleighs, horse and cutters.”

“Yes, they lived there. And she used to drive the horse and cutter out, or the buggy, whatever. She didn’t have a car then.”