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“churn”
1. A device or a vessel in which milk or cream is mixed or shaken in order to produce an eatable kind of food: A churn is used to vigorously agitate cream until the butterfat is separated from buttermilk and it turns into fresh butter.
This entry is located in the following unit:
English Words in Action, Group C
(page 3)
churn (verb), churns; churned; churning
1. To shake quickly and often: Athena's mother still churns cream to make fresh butter for her family as she did when she lived on a dairy farm as a young girl.
2. To vigorously move around: One day and night, while Sam and his wife were on a cruise ship, the sea was violently churning causing many of the passengers to become seasick.
3. Feeling sick from nervousness, disgust, etc.: Mark's stomach was churning as he started to get ill with influenza.
5. To produce as part of a continuous process: Ingrid churns out a new novel every six months.
2. To vigorously move around: One day and night, while Sam and his wife were on a cruise ship, the sea was violently churning causing many of the passengers to become seasick.
3. Feeling sick from nervousness, disgust, etc.: Mark's stomach was churning as he started to get ill with influenza.
Just thinking about the final exams, that she would have to take in her university classes, made Pearl's stomach churn.
The terrible violence in the movie churned Kent's stomach.
4. To frequently buy and sell a client's securities: In order to generate more commissions, the broker encouraged his customers to churn their investments often.5. To produce as part of a continuous process: Ingrid churns out a new novel every six months.
This entry is located in the following unit:
English Words in Action, Group C
(page 4)
(words exist in all sizes and degrees of difficulty from numerous languages and English continues to churn out new words from the past and the present)