No. The meaning is far more general than that.
It is almost always used as a preposition.
It is almost always used as a preposition.
Almost always it is aluminum.
Confidence. Its almost always used in political campaigns.
In French, yes. In English, no, it's almost always used in the phrase "in lieu of".
Copper is almost always used in car wiring.
The eggs and sperm contain the material that is used to create a new animal or person. These are found in almost every animal although not all animals reproduce sexually.
[LO 5.2] If the Copy Case command is used to create a new case for a patient, what fields almost always must be changed?
No, the word 'almost' is not a noun.The word 'almost' is an adverb, a word used to modify a verb, an adjective, or another adverb as not quite or very nearly.Example uses of the adverb 'almost':I almost missed my flight. (modifies the verb 'missed')The soup is almost ready. (modifies the adjective 'ready')His payment is almost always late. (modifies the adverb 'always')
Argon isn't used in the air, it was almost always present since the modern atmosphere was formed.
Simply, weakening the immune system. Almost always used for medical purposes.
The proposition used for farm (a location) is almost always "on" - I live on a farm.