cullion /KUL-yən/. noun. A vile fellow; a despicable rascal. Also, a testicle. Derived from Latin cōleus, culleus (bag, testicle). See also (if you must): colho, cojon and coglione.
“Away, base cullions!” (William Shakespeare)
“That’s a fine thing that cullion of a son of yours is after doing now.” (Benjamin Black)
“If you think me a whore, where are the gifts I have received from my lovers? All the gifts I have are given me by my husband, the whoreson foul-mouthed cullion who tries to buy my goodwill for his own lusts because the priests have made him half a eunuch!” (Marion Zimmer Bradley)
“Do you see nothing? clodpatel Huguenot! varlet! cullion! What brought you here into my studio?” (Honoré de Balzac)
“Their wives and loveliest daughters constuprated by every base cullion, as Sejanus’ daughter was by the hangman in public, before their fathers and husbands’ faces.” (Robert Burton)
“But by the croys which that Seint Eleyne fond,
I wolde I hadde thy coillons in myn hond
In stide of relikes or of seintuarie.”
(Chaucer)