kojono
Appearance
Esperanto
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Italian coglione and Spanish cojón, from Vulgar Latin *cōleōnem, from Latin cōleus (“sack, scrotum”). Compare French couillon.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]kojono (accusative singular kojonon, plural kojonoj, accusative plural kojonojn)
- (vulgar slang, in the plural) balls, nuts
- 1950, Cezaro Rossetti, Kredu min, sinjorino!:
- Ba! Vi ne povus eĉ vendi kojonojn al eŭnuko.
- Bah! You couldn't even sell balls to a eunuch.
- 2000, Boris Vian, “La tubar-riparisto”, in La Ondo de Esperanto:
- — Ĉiuokaze, — li diris, — se mi tenus la fian infanon de putino kun grasaĵo de kangurua kojono, kiu faraĉis tiun nom-de-Di' merdan bordelan instalaĵon kun tiel aĉa maniero…. nu…. kiel oni diras, mi ne komplimentus lin.
- — In any event, — he said, — if I had the vile child of a whore with grease of a kangaroo's nut who fucking did this God damned shitty fucking installation in such a shitty way…well…how do you say, I wouldn't compliment him.
- 2013, Jorge Camacho, “Carlo Minnaja”, in En La Profundo:
- Ne tuŝu al mi la kojonojn
per via afablo ĝisnaŭza
aŭ, fakte, senviva formalo
de homo kun feblaj principoj- Don't touch my nuts
with your nauseating kindness
or, really, lifeless formality
of a person with feeble principles
- Don't touch my nuts
Polish
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Verb
[edit]kojono
- impersonal past of koić
Categories:
- Esperanto terms derived from Italian
- Esperanto terms derived from Spanish
- Esperanto terms derived from Vulgar Latin
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- Rhymes:Esperanto/ono
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- Rhymes:Polish/ɔnɔ
- Rhymes:Polish/ɔnɔ/3 syllables
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