A question that is asked by foreigners or someone who doesn't understand the English language - the question doesn't exactly make sense.
It's called either a picnic basket or a picnic hamper.
No, picnic is a noun (a picnic) and a verb (to picnic).
It can be both depending on the syntax or the sentence. For example:Noun: We went on a picnic today.Verb: Can we go picnicking today?
Picnic is usually used as a noun:We are having a picnic on the weekend.But it can be used as a verb:We will picnic beside the river.
The duration of The Picnic is 1680.0 seconds.
No, the word 'picnic' is a noun and a verb.The noun 'picnic' is a word for an outing or occasion that involves taking a packed meal to be eaten outdoors; for example:We had a picnic today.The verb 'picnic' is to have or take part in a picnic; for example:We picnic at the park south of town.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence; for example:We had a picnic today. It was a lot of fun.
A picnic hamper.
Picnic.
No Picnic was created in 1987.
While they're both good choices, a scarf is often considered more appropiate.
The word 'picnic' is both a noun (picnic, picnics) and a verb (picnic, picnics, picnicking, picnicked).The noun picnic is a word for an outing that includes food packaged to be eaten outdoors:A picnic in the park sounds very nice on a day like today.The verb to picnic is to take an outing that includes food to be eaten outdoors:We can watch the geese in the pond while we picnic by the lake.
The word 'picnic' is both a noun (picnic, picnics) and a verb (picnic, picnics, picnicking, picnicked).The noun picnic is a word for an outing that includes food packaged to be eaten outdoors:A picnic in the park sounds very nice on a day like today.The verb to picnic is to take an outing that includes food to be eaten outdoors:We can watch the geese in the pond while we picnic by the lake.