1. shunning - Noun
2. shunning - Verb
Derived from shun
of Shun
Source: Webster's dictionaryAs the economy gradually unlocks and workplaces resume functioning albeit, in a limited capacity, car buyers are shunning shared modes of transportation and opting for personal cars. Source: Internet
Candidates who began campaigning early this month have been wearing masks and exchanging fist bumps with voters in small meetings, shunning handshakes and big rallies. Source: Internet
Businesses were suffering large losses, as customers were shunning the common meat joints for the popular nyama choma (roast meat), as it was believed to be spreading the fever. Source: Internet
Excommunication among the Old Order Amish results in shunning or the Meidung, the severity of which depends on many factors, such as the family, the local community as well as the type of Amish. Source: Internet
Historically PSV compete with a workmanlike ethic, preferring a more robust 4-3-1-2 or 4-2-3-1, typically shunning the seductive 4-3-3 approach favoured in Amsterdam. Source: Internet
But shunning them will only hasten the death of journalism itself. Source: Internet