Every cloud is full of water . When it rains the dark clouds collide each other . There is frition between them . As a result silver lining or lightning is formed . Therefore it is said that every cloud has a silver lining.
Well the phrase comes from the saying "Every cloud has a silver lining" which means every problem (the cloud) has something good from it (the silver lining) so basically that person is saying you dont look at the good side of bad things
Every Silver Lining Has a Cloud was created in 1993.
The axiom, "Every cloud has a silver lining," is not found in the Bible.
This quote is by John Milton.
The phrase "every cloud has a silver lining" means that in every bad situation, there are some good bits, or something to be optimistic about. No clouds literally have a silver lining, and a cloud only appears to be silver when the sun hits it in a certain way. As for the idiomatic meaning, it might be true. Try thinking of any bad situation you can and I'm sure you can think of a couple of ways it could become good, so yes every cloud does have a silver lining.
In reality every clad coin has a copper lining, LOL!But if you spell the expression correctly, it's "Every CLOUD has a silver lining". It means that some good can still come out of unfortunate or unhappy events.
It means that there is always a sign of hope in a gloomy situation
Curiosity killed the cat.
Clouds technically can have 'silver linings' generally caused by light when the sun is just behind them, causing the top layer of the cloud to look lighter as its thinner and less dense than the rest of the cloud, and sometimes the silver linings can be slightly blinding as the light can reflect off the water droplets and go into your eyes.
"John Milton's masque (dramatic entertainment) 'Comus' (1634) gave rise to the current proverb with the lines, 'Was I deceiv'd, or did a sable cloud/ Turn forth her silver lining on the night?' Charles Dickens, in his novel 'Bleak House' (1852), recalled the lines with 'I turn my silver lining outward like Milton's cloud,' and the American impresario Phineas T. Barnum first recorded the wording of the modern saying in 'Struggles and Triumphs' (1869) with 'Every cloud,' says the proverb, 'has a silver lining.'" Thus, Phineas T. Barnum, in 1869, was the first to write the proverb that is said today, but the concept behind it dates back to John Milton's masque in 1634.
Every cloud has a silver lining. Each to their own. Expect the unexpected.
For everything bad that happens, a good thing will happen.