Morale
in sentence
103 examples of Morale in a sentence
He said, it's better that we should all suffer a little than any of us should have to suffer a lot, and
morale
went up.
There's a great
morale
among them.
And pretty soon this goal of raising
morale
by breaking up the monotony in the fulfillment center actually became micromanagement, and people started complaining to HR.
My goal was to raise awareness and to raise the
morale.
For the next several months this cat hunted rats and raised British
morale
- until a sudden torpedo strike shattered the hull and sank the ship.
It causes people who engage in that activity to lose
morale
and it causes the activity itself to lose morality.
These adventures cost the crew both in men and morale– and some feared they might be losing their minds.
If you're in the middle of a ferocious war and it's still not clear that you're going to come out on top, among the things you'll be concerned with is to keep up the
morale
of the civilians...to demonstrate that our troops have the bravery, the resourcefulness and the dedication to overcome all the odds in a noble cause.
Vin Diesel acts really well in the role as Riddick and even though his character is a hardcore, tough survivor he still takes
morale
decisions almost on the verge of good, but that does not mean his decisions do not turn in his favor at the very end... Why destroy an already perfect reputation?
Sometimes a movie is so comprehensively awful it has a destructive effect on your
morale.
Released in December 1951 by Warner Brothers, STARLIFT is a very obvious effort to replicate the success of the studio's star-studded World War Two home-front
morale
booster "Hollywood Canteen."
Clearly there are
morale
and motivation problems at Disney, not to mention a complete lack of oversight and quality control.
There often quite lame,
morale
dedicative, and just plain.
The
morale
of the film shows that good behavior with the others may bring benefits at the end.
The
morale
of this movie is: look out for the friend, he may sell you out for a dime.
This particular Joe McDoakes short subject was obviously inspired by the all star Warner Brothers spectacular Thank Your Lucky Stars, one of those all star wartime
morale
boosters of the period.
Jane, you must remember, was part of the escapist fantasy of the wartime years, created to boost the
morale
of the troops.
Its seemingly insignificant settings apparently not imparting any
morale
at story's end.
In the end, Mr. Kid tell they the peoples come there for a bachelor party believe a bachelor party weekend is mean to broke all limit of decency and violation of the
morale
values, actually is about friendship!
This TV movie opens with a tragic attack on the human race by the vicious and mechanical Cylons, including the spectacular strafing and bombing of the planet Caprica, which destroys Colonial
morale.
I appreciated practically every element in this wonderful, delightful masterpiece of exemplary romantic comedy, in its indelible acting (Oscars well deserved), its whimsical, touching screenplay (This was neons above "Good Will Hunting"'s quality) and its comforting morale, that despite all of the great odds in life which prevent us from being happy, we can perhaps find it within ourselves to take that one important step in reversing our fortunes, in "stopping with taking pills" and to allow our lives, and our desires to shine and be realized, as this story depicts life.
Yes, you've guessed right, this is yet another computer-animated film, filled with unnecessary
morale
and boring jokes.
Of course there's a
morale
to the story, the folly of men, but how many movies and tales do we have to hear about our own bane.
The greatest line of the film, perhaps the
morale
of the story, I think, comes at the very end: "The Qur'an says that if you kill an innocent person it's as if you've killed all mankind", but "it also says that if you save a life it's like you've saved all mankind".
I suggest reading "Under The Black Flag" by David Cordingly who writes about Teach using fact, not silliness which only minimizes and belittles the genius of one of the last true men who embraced freedom and had the will & courage to choose his own destiny "The floggings will continue until
morale
improves."
Kenneth J. Hall's pathetic (mis)direction, Hall's equally dismal script (Hall is the same genius dreck feature scribe who penned the brilliant screenplay for "Nightmare Sisters"), Christopher Condon's endearingly crude'n'clunky cinematography, the dreadful dialogue ("Aren't they the ones who do those schlocky low budget films in Italy?"), the cheesy gore, nil suspense, sluggish pacing, terrible acting, a laughably hokey some-poor-guy-in-an-obvious-rubber-suit monster, Paul Natzke's annoyingly droning synthesizer score, and even a heavy-handed
morale
about the perils of vanity ensure that this hilariously horrendous honey is an absolute campy hoot from start to finish.
Went the Day Well? is one of the British war movies made during WWII that were meant to strengthen
morale
and inspire steadfastness.
The plot is banale, the characters are simple stereotypes, no psychological analysis whatsoever, the themes are not well developed and the ending is awful,no war movie should end with a "all's well what ends well
" morale.
It is boring in general and no message no
morale
as such in the film.
Directed by Leslie Howard(who also played Mitchell)The First Of The Few tells his story from an idea he had one day watching the birds to the planes flying in the war.Made in 1942 a year after the Spifires helped win The Battle of Britain this is an uplifting film made I imagine for the sole purpose of building troop
morale.
Next
Related words
Their
About
Boost
There
Among
Would
Important
Employees
Years
Which
Story
Social
Public
People
Other
While
Should
Problems
Movie
Forces