It could be a reference used to mean "without clothing" or "nude" or the like. Here are a couple of lines from a TV show. "What did you wear when you were dancing?" "Nothing but skin." The first line is a person asking an exotic dancer (a former one, actually) what she wore when she was working as a dancer. The reply says it all. She is telling the person asking the question that she danced nude. She didn't wear anything at all. [This is from a CSI episode. Willows was being asked the question, which may not be worded exactly as asked, but the idea is 100% correct. And the answer is (if memory serves) a direct quote. Just so you know.]
they mean nothing they mean nothing because they are nothing
nothing
Bare skin refers to nothing covering the body.
If mean Rosa Parks she is dead, so she has nothing to do today.
If its only on the out side skin nothing, if its the inside then its over ripe or rotten
It did mean Special Edition in years past but may mean nothing today.
If you mean falling off then NO. But if you mean like the skin comes off, it happens occasionally and nothing is wrong.
Nothing has changed example if an item was $4.00 last year and it is the same price today then it has gone up by 0%
Nihil = 'Nothing' as a noun; 'not at all' as an abverb
Nothing just "skin."
it means nothing, nothing at all!
it means nothing, nothing at all!