Con is the French for cunt. Cul is more literally ass or arse, depending on your slang preferences, but the differences when used in swearing are ambiguous as in, "A nice piece of cunt" versus "A nice piece of ass".
They've been there sodding ages. Something to with that spidering malarky, as i understand it.
MrTrentA young loner on a crusade to champion the cause of the innocent, the helpless, the powerless. In a world of criminals who operate above the law.
They came around 0.8.2 I believe, maybe a little after.
Been discussed on here in at least two threads (possibly more, but my memory is giving only a couple right now).
As has been stated, their presence coincides with that spider having visited recently - probably in the past fifteen minutes (as is the case for members).
I haven't tried, but perhaps the word filter would work on them - allowing you to disappear or format as you prefer?
It's not a Goethe moment for Mr. M. There is a certain flexibility about the term cul depending on how it's used. It means 'end' as in cul-de-sac and it could be used in expressions to mean cunt - just not as often as con.
By the way, my French isn't especially good, I just have plenty of French nephews and nieces so my exposure to swearing in French is quite high.
I was reasonably confident of my ground, cuntwise, largely as a consequence of a charismatic, liberal and rugby-addicted French teacher in secondary school. He knew and was happy to share with his students a wide vocabulary of pardon-my-French epithets that he had picked up on the touchline.
"We all have flaws, and mine is being wicked." James Thurber, The Thirteen Clocks 1951