13 Words to use with tweed

Returning tourists in all the glory of field glasses and tweed suits; British officers going home on furlough from the different outposts where they were stationed; merchants from the rich markets of the far East; picturesque foreigners in national costume; and a bishop who paced the deck with a dignity becoming his ecclesiastical rank.

She was sensibly dressed in a short tweed skirt, high shooting-boots and a tam-o'-shanter hat, while I also had on an old shooting-suit and carried a thick serviceable stick with which I could prod likely spots.

Then she took out the pins from her hat, banged it upon the table, opened her tweed coat, came round to the fireside, and threw herself into an easy-chair.

She had been vouchsafed for a moment a vision of herself in some squalid Russian village, in a hideous Russian-made tweed dress, dispensing the necessaries of life to a people only little raised above the beasts of the field.

He shook out an ulster from a bundle of wraps, and selected a tweed cap.

A young man stood at the entrance a stocky, bull-necked young miner, in tweed Sunday clothes and an aggressive neck-tie.

When I got outside the park gates I pulled down my pack and took out of it the only thing that had stood between me and a night's lodginga grey tweed sportsman's jacketand I put it on, and with it a collar and tie, and I walked along the road in real sadness.

And they were all so gay and looked so charming and suitably clad, in their rough, short, tweed frocks.

I was alone and in a rough tweed suita strange figure in that world of khaki and rifles.

Wearing a bowler hat and tweed apparel, Or craving sustenance for your inside Drawn either from the oven or the barrel; Scarcely you figure in my eye As liable, in Nature's course, to die.

Mr. Van Torp pulled a big carrot from the pocket of his tweed jacket and let his horse bite it off by inches.

The present fashion does not go beyond a grey tweed lounge suit, with white spats and velours hat.

It will not be allowed to wear tweed pantaloons except for one circumstance; that it is now building its best houses of stone instead of brick.

13 Words to use with  tweed