1. churning - Noun
2. churning - Verb
4. churning - Adjective Satellite
of Churn
The act of one who churns.
The quantity of butter made at one operation.
Source: Webster's dictionaryThe new Detroit churning out Schumer-mobiles will make the steel mills of the Soviet Union look the model of efficiency. Charles Krauthammer
There is the churning and the boiling of the sea, and the foam on top of it and that is what man is, churning and foam together. Simone Schwarz-Bart
It's a pity, a gentleman in refined retirement composing poetry: He models his work on the classic verse of China. And his poems are elegant, full of fine phrases. But if you don't write of things deep in your own heart, What's the use of churning out so many words? Ryōkan
Films and television and even comic books are churning out vast quantities of fictional narratives, and the public continues to swallow them up with great passion. That is because human beings need stories. Paul Auster
I'm not a pop act, churning stuff out really quickly. I find the music that arises from that style of working is distracted, not particularly profound. Paloma Faith
Long churning makes bad butter. Irish Proverb