morale 的定义
- emotional or mental condition with respect to cheerfulness, confidence, zeal, etc., especially in the face of opposition, hardship, etc.: the morale of the troops.
morale 近义词
confidence, self-esteem
更多morale例句
- The stock was finally recovering in those early days, but staff morale wasn’t.
- “If people are going to be fired because of low morale, it starts at the top,” he said, in reference to Pompeo.
- Cooper with American Postal Workers Union said employee morale is low and despite years of financial struggles, he has never seen a situation more dire.
- As workplaces become increasingly distributed, leaders will need to take into account how the arrangement of teams will impact productivity and, more importantly, what it will do to long-term employee morale and well-being.
- Such imagery must have played its psychological role in bolstering the morale of many spiritual Crusaders.
- James brought little in the way of survival skills, but his companionship at night raised the team morale.
- It does, in my experience, have an effect on agency morale, and that affects performance at some level.
- That announcement dealt a huge blow to our morale internally and to the case that we made to minority voters externally.
- Itani told me that news of the letter was awful for the morale of the opposition forces.
- The emails will continue, in other words, until morale improves.
- Thus it was that he himself created the morale which enabled him again and again to conquer against overwhelming odds.
- You think it's going to do morale here any good to have four dead men floating alongside where everyone can see them?
- The meanness, the squalor, the degradation of his morale and life are not discernible in his works.
- Meanwhile, I checked almost hourly with Survey Section, hoping for good news to consolidate the improved morale situation.
- The action had a depressing effect on Union morale but greatly boosted that of the Confederates.