packages of pickles sent by pickle lovers piled into a vatican.
if you were trying to say "I am bringing ____ to the picnic" for example you would say "traigo/estoy trayendo _____a la jira (to the picnic)"
couverture de pique-nique
Un pique-nique à la campagne is 'a picnic by the countryside' in English.
In 1955, the French proposed translation for computer was 'calculateur' and IBM France asked for a name giving a broader idea of the possibilities of its machine. A French professor proposed the term 'ordinateur' ('who gives orders'). But why did the French not simply take the English word into their language, as with "Le Weekend" and "Le Picnic"? That's almost certainly because the word "computer" sounds like two rude French words: "Con" and "Putain", or "C*ntwhore", as it would sound to many Frenchmen. Perhaps it is unsurprising that this word did not assimilate into the French language.
1 syllable:am, cam, clam, cram, dam, dram, gram, ham, jam, jamb, lam, lamb, ram, sam, scam, sham, slam, spam, swam, tam, tram, wham, yam2 syllables:blood clam, exam, graham, green gram, high dam, horse gram, i am, madame, red gram, roast lamb, round clam, small slam, white yam, wild yam3 syllables:breast of lamb, Chinese yam, cut of lamb, fluid dram, giant clam, golden gram, hoover dam, leg of lamb, little slam, loin of lamb, paschal lamb, Persian lamb, picnic ham, rack of lamb, razor clam, steamer clam, tinker's dam, tinker's damn, traffic jam, uncle sam, viet nam, water yam4 syllables:Aries the ram, battering ram, cherrystone clam, elephant yam, final exam, freshwater clam, hydraulic ram, midterm exam, oral exam, saddle of lamb, scythian lamb, strawberry jam, Virginia ham5 syllables:distributor cam, medical exam7 syllables:preliminary examfrom: rhymezone.com
No, picnic is a noun (a picnic) and a verb (to picnic).
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.
Picnic.
A picnic hamper.
No Picnic was created in 1987.
Telephone the zoo and ask! They probably have picnic tables in certain areas for people wanting to eat their own food. Tables in front of cafés might be reserved only for patrons to eat food bought at the café.
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.
picnic is a common noun
A picnic hamper.