To the economy, and every cloud has a silver lining, they say, but in the dismal science, as they call economics, the opposite is often true. |
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I tried to tell him to think of the good times, that every cloud has a silver lining. |
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But every cloud has a silver lining, and my memories of 1956 are generally fond. |
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Well, here's the news that proves the maxim every cloud has a silver lining. |
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It seems that if you're big, rich and powerful enough, every cloud has a silver lining. |
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The sharp movement didn't make me physically tired, which shows that every cloud has a silver lining. |
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All in all it's a bit of a mess but they say every cloud has a silver lining. |
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Sorry, but I cannot resist an urge to cite the usually dubious claim that every cloud has a silver lining. |
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In a case of every cloud has a silver lining, Bernard had injured his knee and the other soldiers continued on their journey, only to be ambushed. |
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But since every cloud has a silver lining, these tragedies at least have the advantage of inducing people to take steps to ensure that others of their kind may not be repeated. |
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Creatively, then, every cloud has a silver lining. |
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This caused great suffering but every cloud has a silver lining and there must be some reason for all this suffering, for all this changing, for all this war. |
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However, every cloud has a silver lining. In this case, the silver lining was an opportunity to review the functioning of the Office, in detail, from top to bottom. |
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Taking into account the expression that every cloud has a silver lining, those years of exile gave him the chance to know and investigate that part of the Basque Country, which he hadn't been familiar with. |
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Every cloud has a silver lining, and having endured years of financial difficulties, Bangladesh will launch its first professional league on 21 December in the hope that it will herald the beginning of a new and exciting era. |
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