different between scunner vs cunner

scunner

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Scots scunner, skunner, from Old Scots skunnyr, skowner (to shrink back; flinch), from Middle English skoneren (to feel sick or disgusted), of uncertain origin. Perhaps from a frequentative of shun. If so, etymologically shun +? -er (frequentative suffix). Compare also Middle English scurnen (to flinch), English scare, English scorn.

Verb

scunner (third-person singular simple present scunners, present participle scunnering, simple past and past participle scunnered)

  1. To be sick of.
  2. (Northumbria) To dislike.
  3. (Britain, Scotland, dialect) To cause to loathe, or feel disgust at.

Noun

scunner (plural scunners)

  1. (Northumbria) Dislike or aversion.
  2. (North Yorkshire, derogatory) An urban youth usually associated with trouble or petty crime; a young chav.

Synonyms

  • charva, charver (Tyneside dialect)
  • chav
  • scally

References

  • A Dictionary of North East Dialect, Bill Griffiths, 2005, Northumbria University Press, ?ISBN

Anagrams

  • cunners

Scots

Verb

scunner (third-person singular present scunners, present participle scunnerin, past scunnert, past participle scunnert)

  1. to be very tired, to be knackered

scunner From the web:

  • scunner meaning
  • scunnered what does it mean
  • what does scunner drop
  • what does scunnered mean in irish
  • what does scunnered
  • what does scunner mean in scots
  • what does cumbersome mean
  • what does scunnered mean urban dictionary


cunner

English

Noun

cunner (plural cunners)

  1. A marine European fish (Symphodus melops).
  2. The related American conner (Tautogolabrus adspersus).

Translations

See also

  • conner

cunner From the web:

  • what does cunning mean
  • what is a nunnery mean
  • what is a cunner fish
  • what rhymes with gunner
  • what do cunning mean
  • what is cunning meaning
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like