nothing. noun. A thing of no account, value or note; something irrelevant and impertinent; something of comparative unimportance; utter insignificance; a trifle.
Nothing but Trouble is a 1991 American comedy horror film written and directed by Dan Aykroyd in his directorial debut, based on a story by his brother Peter, and starring Chevy Chase, Dan Aykroyd (in a dual role), John Candy (in a dual role), and Demi Moore.It tells the story of two yuppies and the clients of one of them who are taken to court for running a stop sign in the bizarre nothing but From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English nothing but only She'd had nothing but bad luck. → nothing Examples from the Corpus nothing but • They saw nothing but a dim grayness, or was it blackness? • His death was nothing but an absurd, ludicrous accident. • They did nothing but argue for the whole journey.
Nothing But Trouble: Directed by Dan Aykroyd. With Chevy Chase, Dan Aykroyd, John Candy, Demi Moore. A businessman and his friends are captured by a sadistic judge and his equally odd family in a bizarre mansion in the backwoods.

Nothing but means a lot of. The grammar is nothing but + noun (or) nothing but + noun phrase. We often use nothing but when we complain about something or talk about the negative aspects of something, but you can use nothing but when we talk about positive situations or things: Jack's son is nothing but trouble. Jack's son always causes

nothing but trouble 1. Only problems and nothing else. I spent $30,000 on this dang car, and it's given me nothing but trouble since the day 2. A source of undesirable behavior. Of course Tom's started getting detention—those new friends of his are nothing but
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  • nothing but trouble meaning