Get Free Checker

churning

[ US /ˈtʃɝnɪŋ/ ]
[ UK /t‍ʃˈɜːnɪŋ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. moving with or producing or produced by vigorous agitation
    winds whipped the piled leaves into churning masses
    a car stuck in the churned-up mud
  2. (of a liquid) agitated vigorously; in a state of turbulence
    the river's roiling current
    turbulent rapids

How To Use churning In A Sentence

  • After churning out some of Bollywood's most melodious tunes, music directors and partners Jatin-Lalit are all set to go.
  • Just a bite or two to get the stomach juices churning.
  • But emotional ferment still seething from his betrayed boyhood keeps his body churning with unruly symptoms. Times, Sunday Times
  • Most fledgling parents or parents-to-be feel duty-bound to invest in some sort of guide to looking after a new baby, and publishers, naturally, feel duty-bound to take advantage of that by churning out one guide after another.
  • Trash and harrowingly low budgets are the point of a Versus movie, as the genre's pioneers well knew back when they were churning out Abbott And Costello Meet Frankenstein/The Invisible Man/The Mummy. Cowboys & Aliens: the Versus movie without Versus in its name
  • The rest of the album is equally mind-churningly inane.
  • Universal are just churning our 'remasters' this year and I've yet to hear an album that's been improved by it. The Line Of Best Fit
  • Pubs usually stage karaoke evenings or have jukeboxes churning out the hits.
  • It is usually made by churning soft beef fat (called oleo oil) and neutral School and Home Cooking
  • He presented me with a copy of his book, After Survival, which contains stomach-churning memories of what he witnessed as a youth.
View all