- angry/in a bad mood; or "essere
coglione" ("to be a jerk or fool"). Note that when said to a
close friend ("ma
quanto sei
coglione"), the word is not really...
- la testa,
coglione! (translated: "Duck your head, dumb****!"),
which he
contended to be a
common American colloquialism. The
expletive coglione (a vulgar...
- used as interjections, such as in
English (balls or ****s),
Italian (
coglione), and
Spanish (cojones).
Danish uses ****s as a term of
abuse with...
- that
leased the condo, and
afterwards sold it. Fini said he was "a dork (
coglione) but
never a
corrupt man",
because he did not
notice that the
condo was...
- Anjou,
featuring three pairs of ****s. The name "Colleoni" was in Bartolomeo's day
alternately spelled "
Coglione", a
vulgar term
meaning "balls"....
- freelancer.
Haydn later remembered Porpora thus: "There was no lack of Asino,
Coglione,
Birbante [****, cullion, rascal], and
pokes in the ribs, but I put up with...
-
Alexandru Draghici TV
series 2021
Superwog 2
roles TV
series 2021 New Gold
Mountain Gregor TV
miniseries In
production Bunchie Alfredo Coglione TV series...
-
movie 1994 Me
Permites Matarte?
Calavera 1994
Chilindrina en
Apuros Don
Coglione 1995 La Risa en
Vacaciones 6
Pedro TV
movie 1996 La
Buenota Risa 1996 La...
- the
world sees him. Coliandro's very name is a play on the
Italian word
coglione – a word
literally meaning "balls", but most
usually used with the meaning...
-
marginal notes in his copy of it with
terms such as "bue" ("ox") and "
coglione" ("balls"),
deriding him for his
ignorance of both
Italian and of Latin...