(1) Labour's opponents claim they are encountering a door-step scunner factor with the government's choice of election timing, four days before Christmas.(2) The jury obviously took a scunner (an intense disliking) to the plaintiff and the plaintiff's case.(3) Roth takes an especial scunner to poor Kentucky, his locus of American evil.(4) why have you a scunner against Esme?(5) why have you a scunner against him?(6) Against that dark, wavy-haired, bespectacled and pompous little individual, I had taken an instant scunner .(7) But he does harbour this horrible dread of dentistry which became a real scunner when he suffered a bout of toothache.(8) I'm also scunnered with talking about cross-dressing and engaging in the whole u2018should men wear skirtsu2019 debate, feeling as I do that it merely illustrates for the umpteenth time that those who don't know history are doomed to repeat it.(9) The public is scunnered enough with politics as it is.(10) I'm fair scunnered about the Holyrood project, and I have the advantage of being fair scunnered before just about anyone else in the country.(11) If Salmond was scunnered with Scotland, why not let him have a rest in Westminster?(12) I'm a wee bit scunnered with football at the moment, as you can imagine.(13) One of the ablest political figures of his generation, Salmond, scunnered , gave up on leading the parliament he had devoted his life to winning.(14) Scunnered with the malign Scottish press, scunnered with his own backbenchers, scunnered with the amateurism and ineptness of the parliament.(15) For 800 of those 850 pages I was transported, absorbed, unsettled and delighted; but scunnered by the cop-out.(16) There's a good Scots word for McLeish's physical and mental state: he is scunnered .