0 to move something, especially a liquid, with great force: --
1 If customers churn between different companies that provide a particular service, they change repeatedly from one to another. --
2 a large container for transporting milk or for making milk into butter: --
3 the number of customers who decide to stop using a service offered by one company and to use another company, usually because it offers a better service or price: --
5 a container in which cream is made into butter --
I know the difficulty about the sealing of churns, but recently the practice of sealing churns had grown.
The material got churned into something resembling fibre, which it is difficult to describe.
Already, people can avoid churning the equivalent of 300 double-decker bus loads of lead into the environment every year.
One achieves nothing; one is only churning the money over.
More and more records were indeed churned out of the governmental machine.
However, as long as they are linked up, the stuff will continue to be churned out.
The inspection of churns will still be the duty of the local authority.
The churns in the cowhouses are being inspected there.