morale

US: /mɝˈæɫ/

UK: /məɹˈæl/



English - Vietnamese dictionary

morale /mɔ'rɑ:l/
  • danh từ
    • (quân sự) tính thần, chí khí, nhuệ khí
      • low morale: tinh thần thấp kém
      • sagging morale: tinh thần suy sụp, tinh thần sút kém


Advanced English dictionary

+ noun
[U] the amount of confidence and enthusiasm, etc. that a person or a group has at a particular time: to boost / raise / improve morale + Morale amongst the players is very high at the moment. + Staff are suffering from low morale. + Another win would be good for the team's morale.

Collocation

ADJ.

good, high
Morale is very high in the school.
| low, poor, shaky | national, popular | staff

VERB + MORALE

affect, be bad for, be damaging to, damage, hit, lower, sap, undermine
These unfortunate incidents sapped both our morale and our resources.
| be good for, bolster, boost, do wonders for, improve, lift, raise, restore
measures designed to boost the morale of the police
| keep up, maintain
The bonus helped maintain morale among the staff.
| destroy

MORALE + VERB

improve, rise | be at rock bottom, decline, sag, weaken

MORALE + NOUN

booster
Mail from home is a great morale booster for our soldiers.

PREP.

~ among
Morale among nurses is at rock bottom.

PHRASES

a collapse/loss of morale



Concise dictionary

moralesmə'ræl /-'rɑːl
noun
+a state of individual psychological well-being based upon a sense of confidence and usefulness and purpose
+the spirit of a group that makes the members want the group to succeed


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