The other Indian English words in OALD10e: Auntie (polite way of addressing or referring to an older woman), Auntieji (if you want to sound especially polite), similarly Uncle/Uncleji; Bus Stand (Bus Station), Mugging (learning something by repeating it until you remember it rather than by understanding the meaning of it), Tube light (a fluorescent light in the shape of a tube), Tempo (a vehicle with three wheels, used to deliver goods), Rowdy sheeter (a person who has been found guilty of multiple crimes in the past), Non-veg (containing or serving meat and fish/having a diet that includes meat and fish), Veg (suitable for a person who does not eat meat or fish, not containing or serving meat or fish), Needful (to do what is necessary), Kindly (used to acknowledge and apologise for something that causes problems or difficulties and ask people to accept and adapt to the situation), Looting (crime of stealing money or property from a person or place) Videograph (to make a video recording of somebody or something), FIR (the abbreviation for first information report), extern (to order somebody to leave a region or district as a punishment), Deemed University (an institution of higher education that is officially accredited as a university) are some of the others words.
Other words such as ‘jugaad’, ‘dadagiri’, ‘achcha’, ‘bapu’ and ‘surya namaskar’ ‘anna’ (elder brother), ‘abba’ (father), ‘gulab jamun’, ‘mirch masala’, ‘keema’, ‘funda’ and ‘chamcha’ can also be found in OALD. Oft-used terms like ‘timepass’, ‘natak’ and ‘chup’ also have their meanings in the dictionary.