0 past simple and past participle of churn --
1 to move something, especially a liquid, with great force: --
2 If customers churn between different companies that provide a particular service, they change repeatedly from one to another. --
Thirdly, the sewage was not going to be processed, but comminuted, which means churned up by the pumps.
The material got churned into something resembling fibre, which it is difficult to describe.
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.
When one allows civil servants to come up with formulae that are punched into computers, all the discrepancies and all the injustices are churned out.
The money will be churned round the system, and they will receive back some of the money that they have paid in tax.
Something like 300 acres of land per year have been inexorably churned into rubble heaps, and in far too many cases left in rubble heaps.
She churned out the soundbites but failed to address real concerns about the working families tax credit, dismissing them as merely technical.