Churning in a sentence as an adjective

I can't help at being annoyed at the part where he has a group of programmers churning out 5 iPhone apps a day.

Is he some kind of business genius, churning out an endless string of sure-fire hits?

Not the most inhumane thing imaginable but still pretty stomach churning to listen to his screams on the scanner.

"Web developers" is an extremely broad range of people, constantly evolving and churning and growing and changing.

While its main purpose is how to maintain a legacy codebase, its an absolute gem when it comes to what type of Perl code you should be churning out.

This “churning” is part of the process of “creative destruction” that shifts economic activity to more productive uses.

The system just keeps on churning.. “Any help would be greatly appreciated!” he wrote, \n punctuating each sentence with a long string of \n exclamation points.

They are still churning out a new show every week or several times a week, they have huge audiences, and they are making more money than you could ever dream about.

Degree-mills rarely ever have this sort of environment and if all universities are reduced to churning out technical apprentices the world will be a worse place for it.

So if you look at it from that perspective it is all about maximizing returns from an investor's perspective and the rest of it is just-so story to keep the pipeline of 20 year olds churning.

"So this article is really about churning out useless research in academia, where merit is measured by how many publications you have rather than by what actual benefit the research has.

I'm reminded now of something that Bill Gates said: universities like Harvard or MIT shouldn't be lauded for churning out smart people... who were already smart before they entered Harvard, we should instead be lauding institutions that admit everyday folks from tough backgrounds that then turn them into smart and able people.

If I was stuck in a lab where a demanding PI with no computer skills kept throwing the results of poorly designed experiments at me and asking for miracles, I'd be a little bitter too.- Just like any other field, there are also lots of places that are great places to work and are churning out some pretty goddamn amazing code and science.

Churning definitions

adjective

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"

See also: churned-up

adjective

(of a liquid) agitated vigorously; in a state of turbulence; "the river's roiling current"; "turbulent rapids"

See also: roiling roiled roily turbulent