What Is This Object?
Here's a quote, verbatim, from a woman in my local grocery store, to her friend, who had just left with the shopping cart to go investigate some radishes or something:
"Teresa! How you gonna walk off with the buggy [while] I'm standin' here holding ice-cold peas?"
Loud, too. My favorite part of the quote is the word "buggy." It struck (and strikes) me as a particularly antiquated and charming way to refer to the wheeled objects one uses to ferry groceries from the shelf to one's automobile. And I guess it's in the local vernacular.
Elsewhere, in Britain, I understand they're called trollies, as in "Could you fetch me the trolley, governor? I'm feeling a bit peckish for some crisps."
And for all I know they could be called something else entirely in entirely different places, for instance where, maybe, YOU live?
Is there another fantastical word I need to know about, before I gather another cart/buggy/trolley full of groceries?
Eatorail?
Treataxi?
Vittlebin?
I await your response.
4 comments:
My vote is for vittlebin!
Love and hugs
YM
basket?
One day my cousins and I (age 12) were in Cubs (now Burlington Coat Factory) with my grandma. We were a couple aisles over from her and had the cart with us. All of a sudden we heard "Where's the wagon?". I about died.
vz
Wagon is awesome! Feels like it should say Radio Flyer on the side, and you and your grandma should be picking up ingredients for mudpies.
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