- a beckoning gesture
- C. D. Beck & Company, of Sidney, Ohio was an intercity motorcoach and transit bus manufacturing company based in the United States that was founded in 1934.
- Beck (also known as Beck.com B-Sides is a self-titled EP by musician Beck which consists of b-sides from the Midnite Vultures era. The EP was only available on Beck's website, and only 10,000 copies were printed. The EP was an enhanced CD and so it also included the "Nicotine and Gravy" video.
- Beck, later called Beck - Lockpojken, is a 1997 film about the Swedish police detective Martin Beck directed by Pelle Seth.
- Discography of the US songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Beck Hansen.
- Ghyll or Gill is used for a stream or narrow valley in the North of England and other parts of the United Kingdom. The word originates from the Old Norse Gil. ...
- Beck is a surname of Germanic descent, meaning "brook" or "stream" (related to Old Norse bekkr), and is fairly common in English-speaking countries, Germany and Denmark. The German name can also be a variant of Becker, which is an occupational surname meaning "baker". ...
- Gustav Becking (1894–1945) was a German musicologist who studied with Wolf and Hugo Riemann. Becking did his doctorate in 1920. He worked as a professor at Utrecht from 1929, in Prague from 1930 according to the The New Grove.
- , (Northern England) A stream or small river
- beck, North of England term for a (usually mountain) stream
- a new word derived from one Steven Beck who is infamous for rolling and otherwise abusing his beautiful Windcheetah, as in: "Oh man, I totally Becked it going around that last corner. I think I broke my elbow!"
- (b. 1970). Singer-songwriter who mixes songwriting craft with audio experimentation, mid-1990s-current.
- (Kill Your Idols series) (Avalon Travel Publishing, Paperback, 18 December 2000, ISBN 1-56025-302-9)
- A vessel for dyeing fabrics in rope form.
- (in Ludwig Beck (German general))
- First 100. Unknown early user.
- abbreviated form of Becken
- Noun: A small stream.
- is used in Yorkshire, Lancashire and Cumbria.