Nonce
Origin 1
From a misdivision in Middle English of þan anes ("the one (occasion, instance)").
Full definition of nonce
Noun
nonce
(plural nonces)- The one or single occasion; the present reason or purpose (now only in for the nonce).That will do for the nonce, but we'll need a better answer for the long term.
- 1857, , , chapter 6:'Idiot!' exclaimed the doctor, who for the nonce was not capable of more than such spasmodic attempts at utterance.
- (lexicography) A nonce word.I had thought that the term was a nonce, but it seems as if it's been picked up by other authors.
- (computing) A number, usually generated randomly or from the time, used once in a cryptographic protocol, to prevent replay attacks.
Adjective
nonce
- denoting something occurring once.
Derived terms
Origin 2
Unknown – UK criminal slang. Possibly originally from dialectical nonce, nonse ("stupid, worthless individual"), or Nance, nance ("effeminate man"), from Nancy boy.
See Nonce (slang)#Etymology for further discussion.
Noun
nonce
(plural nonces)- (British, slang, pejorative) A sex offender, especially of children; a paedophile.That bloke who lives at number 53 is a nonce!
- (British, slang) A stupid or worthless person.
Origin 3
Contraction of number used once
Noun
nonce
(plural nonces)- (cryptography) A datum constructed so as to be unique to a particular message in a stream, in order to prevent replay attacks.In this protocol we use the serial number of the message as a nonce.
- (cryptography) In a security engineering context, a value used only once.
- 1999, Network Working Group, RFC 2617 – HTTP Authentication: Basic and Digest Access Authentication, The Internet Society, page 22,The information gained by the eavesdropper would permit a replay attack, but only with a request for the same document, and even that may be limited by the server's choice of nonce.----