from the East German judge

English edit

Etymology edit

Because of the reputation of East German judges for giving low scores to West Germans at sporting events.

Pronunciation edit

  • (file)

Prepositional phrase edit

from the East German judge

  1. (humorous) Used with an imaginary low score in a competition.
    • 1988, Linda Frye Burnham, High Performance:
      The Birdman receives straight 6-figure contracts across the board except from the East German judge, who makes him pay for his own lunch and won't even validate parking.
    • 2003, Tom Clancy, The Teeth of the Tiger, The Berkley Publishing Group, page 444:
      “Nice pop, Aldo.” “Well, I guess a five-point-six from the East German judge. Let’s get moving.”
    • 2007, Car and Driver, volume 52, page 72:
      The Camry interior styling and fit and finish get eights, even from the East German judge, but the Kia's pull solid nines.