Crummy, cruddy, crappy, or otherwise not very good.
This made-up term, intended as a
spoof of teenage slang of the day, was first used the the 1947 RKO motion picture, "The Bachelor and the
Bobby-Soxer" starring Cary Grant, Myrna Loy, and Shirley Temple. In the opening
scene, when a maid wakes
teenager Susan Turner, played by Temple, she protests being woken, saying "But, Bessie, I feel absolutely sklonklish." Moments later, when Bessie relates the conversation to Susan's older sister, Judge Margaret Turner, played by Loy, the sister says, "Next time she tells you she feels sklonklish, you tell her not to be a clunk."
The
cold autumn rain had
Jimmy feeling sklonklish, but once he got to Susie's
house the hot apple cider and pleasant company quickly cheered him up.