Almost Vs. Hardly [closed]
Solution 1:
The two sentences are very different.
My car has almost run into the crowd.
Means the car has very nearly run into the crowd, but it has not. You may have turned the car away at the last minute, it may have been stopped by something, or you might be referring to a moment in time just before the car ran into the crowd.
My car has hardly run into the crowd.
Means the car has run into the crowd, but only just a little bit. Perhaps you've only hit one or two pedestrians at that point in time, but most of them are unharmed.