in a good morale
Shi Satin Ma Teng, a Chinese idiom, is sh ì B ǎ om ǎ t é ng in pinyin, which means that the army has enough food and morale. It comes from the tablet of pinghuai West by Han Yu of Tang Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Han Yu's pinghuai West stele in the Tang Dynasty: "the scholars are full and sing, and the horses are in the trough."
Idiom usage
It refers to the spirit of the people.
in a good morale
sit idle and eat , and in time one 's whole fortune will be used up - zuò chī shān bēng
leadership rendered ineffectual by recalcitrant subordinates - wěi dà nán diào