A blanket, food, plates, something to drink and probably something to carry it all in.
friends
Literally translates to "you take a picnic". But it means "you have a picnic".
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.
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.
when theyre ready and you take them off of it and try someting else
12x someting to give me 108 = 1296
10 pi or 314.someting something 10 pi or 314.someting something 10 pi or 314.someting something
No, picnic is a noun (a picnic) and a verb (to picnic).
"Have" is used in present tense, "has" is used with third person singular in present tense, and "had" is used in past tense. For example: "I have a cat", "She has a dog", "They had a picnic yesterday".
after the picnic take a lobg bed rest
ITS AN someting.........:)
it is someting