Churn out
churn out (verb) - produce large quantities quickly
churn out at the rate of
churn out at a very fast rate
churns out X a month
churns out X per year
costs next to nothing to churn out
the productivity of the work that's churned out
churn out pieces of paper that nobody seems to read
churn out products
the plant will churn out Y
churned out of the factories
the assembly line will churn out Z
record companies churn out pop songs
churning out the stock that they usually churn out
churn out students
churn out unemployable graduates
Example sentences:
* "The new engine will be churned out at the rate of 135,000 a year when the plant is on full stream."
* "We saw the beginning of the factory, industrialization, big manufacturers where lots of people worked and where cloth could be churned out at a very fast rate, and therefore, cloth was cheaper."
* Europe's biggest lacemaker has just taken delivery of five of these machines which will churn out new three-dimensional lace.
* We've got to look very seriously about the productivity of the work that's churned out."
* The old mill has churned out her very last bag of flour."
* Should the universities churn out unemployable graduates?
* "Production is due to begin in 1986 when the bus plant will start to churn out larger gearboxes at a cost comparable with existing transmissions."
* "Record companies churn out pop songs cut from the same mould year after year."
* Software, once designed and written, costs next to nothing to churn out.
* "These items are churned out poorly and take extra time."
* "If they're churning out the stock that they usually churn out, then they've got thousands in stock."
* "The company already churns out 62 titles a month."
* "The company now churns out thirty seven volumes each year."
* "She claimed photographers who took pictures of her as she walked the streets or appeared at public events were then making a fortune by selling their shots to companies ready to churn out posters, T-shirts and magazines by the million."
* "Today it is one of the best automated factories in the world, with computer-controlled parts arriving at the right instant at each work station to churn out reliable personal computers for a market that is still growing."
* "Their fate is being decided in the United Nations, by the committees which endlessly discuss and debate and churn out pieces of paper that nobody seems to read."
* Wrangler, which had continued to churn out laughably jingoistic ads, decided that Levi's had fallen victim to its own nostalgic hype and altered the perspective.
* The Centre for Policy Studies was only one of a series of institutions which now began to churn out papers, briefings, and a stream of serious young advisers in dark suits who saw it as their role to steer the party away from the errors of its past ways.
* "The military bomb boys can churn out their own bombs without difficulty."
* "The popular TV programme churns out stars for the TV station's bland pop-music programmes and melodramatic but successful soap operas."
* How can this tightly-controlled society churn out inspired film producers?
* "Many of the big European names are being churned out by British design teams who have been trained at the expense of the British taxpayer."
* "For too long, over-indulgent teachers have churned out children for whom reading is a challenge and writing a mystery."
* "Equally important are economies of scope: big firms can use the materials and processes employed to make one product in the manufacture of related goods, as Japan's consumer-electronics companies did in the 1970s, using the same factories that had previously churned out cheap transistor radios to manufacture televisions and videos."
* "Hilarious designs have been churned out of the factories and many have been laughed at.
* "And with the advent of television, the cinema chains virtually abandoned the B-movies overnight; it was shattering for the younger actors and writers who cut their teeth on the second-string movies churned out by the studios."
* "They simply churned out dozens of reprints in a very short space of time to keep up with the ever growing demand by the clamouring public."
* "It was amusing reading some of the stuff that was churned out."
* "The British film industry has churned out many such tales in recent years."
* "How many paperback thrillers are still being churned out about the horror of Hitler's Germany?"
* "Smokey could churn out the dance stuff at will, but his voice truly took flight on shimmering smoochers like this."
* "The information which appears on Skymaster comes from the same computers at Heathhrow airport which churn out the printed stuff so you can guarantee that the data is accurate and changes reach you faster than they normally would on the paper system."
* "We have to be more creative, perhaps in the er press releases we put out, not churn one out every single day, that would be nonsensical, but whatever we do churn out, as a press release, it's got to be relevant, and they will find interesting."






