The Collaborative International Dictionary
Almost \Al"most\ ([add]l"m[=o]st), adv. [AS. ealm[ae]st, [ae]lm[ae]st, quite the most, almost all; eal (OE. al) all + m?st most.] Nearly; well nigh; all but; for the greatest part.
Almost thou persuadest me to be a Christian.
--Acts
xxvi. 28.
Almost never, hardly ever; scarcely ever.
Almost nothing, scarcely anything.
Usage examples of "almost nothing".
I'd had almost nothing to eat since Deborah--since the day before, and I was hungry.
She was scantily dressed, as was the custom of her kind, in a clinging outfit that concealed almost nothing and accentuated that which it hid.
He also was far more sophisticated and well informed on the very subjects that I most desperately wished to know aboutand about which I knew almost nothing which is to say what editors and publishers did, what the real, live ones who brought out the science fiction magazines I loved were like and, especially, what their faults were when they had any, which most of them did.
At the same time, I'm of the opinion that almost nothing is unbuildable that mankind can envision.
I remember almost nothing about that movie, not the title or anything, but I remember that bathroom.
People can rant about it if they like, but they basically know almost nothing.
Nor did it carry the vast array of stores and supplies a colony ship would have had: almost nothing but people and hibernation cubicles and bare provisions for a skeleton crew of watch-keepers.
However, since those breasts can be expected to shrink to almost nothing, this is in the long run a non-issue.
Eshiala wore a simple cotton shift, with almost nothing underneath it, although no one knew that but she.