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Origin and history of testicle

testicle(n.)

"in male mammals one of the two glands (usually enclosed in the scrotum) which secrete sperm," early 15c., alteration of testicule (late 14c.), from Latin testiculus, diminutive of testis "testicle" (see testis).

Old English had beallucas (see ballocks) and herþan, probably originally "leather bag" (compare heorþa "deer-skin"). The commonest slang terms for them in other languages are words for "balls," "stones," "nuts," "eggs."

Entries linking to testicle

"testicles," from Old English beallucas, plural diminutive, from Proto-Germanic *ball-, from PIE root *bhel- (2) "to blow, swell."

"a testicle," 1704, from Latin testis (plural testes) "testicle," a word usually regarded as a special application of testis "witness" (see testament) on the notion of what "bears witness to male virility" [Barnhart]. Stories that trace the Latin word to some supposed swearing-in ceremony are groundless modern inventions.

Compare Greek parastatai "testicles," from parastates "one that stands by;" and French slang témoins, literally "witnesses." But Buck thinks Greek parastatai "testicles" has been wrongly associated with the legal sense of parastatēs "supporter, defender" and suggests instead parastatai in the sense of twin "supporting pillars, props of a mast," etc. Or it might be a euphemistic use of the word in the sense "comrades." OED (1989), meanwhile, points to Walde's suggestion of a connection between testis and testa "pot, shell, etc." (see tete).

"of or pertaining to a testicle or testicles," 1650s, from Latin testiculus (see testicle) + -ar.

Testiculate (adj.), 1760, is "of round or ovoid shape, formed like a testicle," from Late Latin testiculatus "shaped like a testicle; having testicles." Related: Testiculated (1725).

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