Of textiles; having a rough surface.
1A tweedy man with a small mustache stood in the doorway.
2Essentially with what amounts to a tweedy shrug of the shoulders.
3It's a word loved by tweedy academics because of its ambiguity and obscurity.
4And then there were the tweedy ones, but only a few.
5You see the rumpled tweedy fellow talking to St. Clare?
6It's a far cry from a tweedy headshrinking practice.
7I notice that Jeremy Paxman has taken to wearing a tweedy three-piece suit on Newsnight.
8Needless to say, the tweedy Yale professors weren't thrilled.
9It was a blue serge, tweedy-type pinafore dress and I hated it with a vengeance.
10It was a good crowd-academicsociologists rubbing tweedy elbows with spiky-hairedGoths in black overcoats.
11The interior had a tweedy, earth-tone, Brady Bunch vibe.
12When Aria saw a hand curled over the edge of the tweedy love seat, she jumped.
13This post is not some huffy, tweedy rant about the superiority of films to video games.
14It was a sports coat, tweedy and sharp.
15He wore beige corduroy slacks and a tweedy sports coat, an open-neck shirt and tan loafers.
16He is a bit older than I, well dressed, tweedy in that good, Giles-y sort of way.