Tweed in a sentence as a noun

And we would wear monocles and brown tweed.

"I can't believe Bon Iver wore a tweed jacket at the Grammys.

Actually, tweed blazers are bang on trend as we say in England these days.

Under the tweed blazer and spectacles, the guy loves baseball.

Look for the professor in the tweed jacket, with horn-rimmed glasses, and the gaze which pierces through both his students' excuses for late homework and statistical irregularities.

I like this idea a lot, but seriously - a tweed blazer is your first offering?Did you A/B test the offering in terms of what your target customer would consider appealing?

The same goes for most of the political changes we associate with modernity and progress - with the notable exception of Bevan and his peers, the people turning the wheels were mainly minor aristocrats in dusty tweed.

Tweed definitions

noun

thick woolen fabric used for clothing; originated in Scotland

noun

(usually in the plural) trousers made of flannel or gabardine or tweed or white cloth

See also: flannel gabardine white