Basket
Middle English: from Old French basket, of unknown ultimate origin.
wiktionary
From Middle English basket, from Anglo-Norman bascat, from Late Latin bascauda(“kettle, table-vessel”), from Common Brittonic (in Breton baskodenn), from Proto-Celtic *baskis(“bundle, load”), from Proto-Indo-European *bʰask-(“bundle”). Related to Latin fascis(“bundle, package, load”). Doublet of fasces.
etymonline
basket (n.)
early 13c., from Anglo-French bascat; of obscure origin despite much speculation. On one theory, it is from Latin bascauda "kettle, table-vessel," said by the Roman poet Martial to be from Celtic British and perhaps cognate with Latin fascis "bundle, faggot," in which case it probably originally meant "wicker basket." But OED frowns on this, and there is no evidence of such a word in Celtic unless later words in Irish and Welsh, sometimes counted as borrowings from English, are original. As "a goal in the game of basketball," 1892; as "a score in basketball," by 1898.