Noun (2)
when we were lads, we raced our toy boats in the narrow beck that bordered the lane
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Noun
But Google and Everyday Robots stressed at the time that a roving butler at one’s beck and call remained far from consumer availability.—Paresh Dave, WIRED, 22 Feb. 2023 Besides working the land, cooking for themselves and their overseers, and being at Jenkins' beck and call, historic preservationist Karen Nance explains that the enslaved people also built the Jenkins home, brick by brick.—Doc Louallen, ABC News, 7 Aug. 2024 Although Le Majestic has everything at your beck and call, the city of Cannes is magical.—Martie Bowser, Essence, 16 May 2024 As Season Three begins, Ava has found a successful niche as a writer on a Last Week Tonight-esque topical comedy show, and things are going well with actress girlfriend Ruby (Lorenza Izzo) now that Ava has grown up ever so slightly, and no longer has to be at Deborah’s beck and call.—Alan Sepinwall, Rolling Stone, 2 May 2024 See all Example Sentences for beck
Word History
Etymology
Verb
Middle English bekken, shortened from bekenen "to give a mute signal," with the n perhaps being taken as the infinitive ending — more at beckon
Noun (1)
Middle English becke, bekke "mute signal, signal of command, bow," noun derivative of bekken "to give a mute signal" — more at beck entry 1
Noun (2)
Middle English bek, from Old Norse bekkr; akin to Old English bæc brook, Old High German bah, Lithuanian bėgti to flee — more at phobia
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