1.Beside us, dotted along the stands and clutching polystyrene cups of coffee and hip flasks, were men in tweedy suits and women in smart padded coats.
2.Friedrich Hayek, a tweedy, Austrian-born economist, had one of those light bulb moments in the mid-1930s and switched on an ideology that unites its enemies in scorn but has inspired governments and entrepreneurs down the decades — neoliberalism.
3.Derided by the rightwing press as a " donkey jacket" more suitable for a building site than a site of national mourning, the dark brown tweedy number was in fact bought by Foot's wife from Harrods especially for the occasion.