The word 'picnic' entered English from French 'pique-nique,' first attested in the 1692 edition of Tony Willis's 'Origines de la Langue Françoise.' In its original French usage, a 'pique-nique' was not an outdoor meal but a social gathering at which each participant contributed a dish, a bottle of wine, or a share of the cost — the seventeenth-century equivalent of a potluck dinner. The meals were typically held indoors, in private homes or rented rooms.
The etymology of French 'pique-nique' is debated but most likely involves 'piquer' (to pick, to peck at, to nibble) combined with 'nique' (a trifle, a thing of no value). The compound thus meant something like 'to pick at trifles' — to nibble informally, without the ceremony of a formal dinner. The reduplicative structure (the rhyming 'pique-nique') is typical of informal or playful French word formation.
The word entered English around 1748, initially retaining the French sense of a shared indoor meal. The transformation into an outdoor activity occurred in England in the early nineteenth century. In 1801, a group of fashionable Londoners founded the 'Picnic Society,' which organized elegant entertainment (including amateur theatricals) as well as meals. By the 1820s and 1830s, the specifically outdoor sense had become dominant in English, probably influenced by the Romantic movement's celebration of nature and the growing custom of pleasure outings
The word has been borrowed from French (or English) into numerous languages: German 'Picknick,' Spanish 'picnic,' Italian 'picnic,' Portuguese 'piquenique,' Russian 'пикник' (piknik), Japanese 'pikunikku' (ピクニック). In each case, the outdoor sense predominates, reflecting the English reinterpretation rather than the original French meaning.
A persistent modern myth claims that the word 'picnic' has racist origins, supposedly deriving from 'pick a nic' (a reference to lynching). This claim is entirely false. The word is documented in French nearly a century before it entered English, and its etymology from 'piquer' + 'nique' is well established. The myth appears to have originated on the internet in the early 2000s and has been debunked by every major etymological reference.
The cultural evolution of the picnic is itself revealing. From its origins as an aristocratic indoor dinner in seventeenth-century France, it became a middle-class outdoor leisure activity in nineteenth-century England, and then a democratic, often patriotic tradition in the United States (the Fourth of July picnic, the church picnic, the company picnic). The word's semantic journey — from shared-cost dinner to pastoral idyll — mirrors broader social changes in how Western cultures have conceived of leisure, nature, and communal eating.