The El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is the coupled ocean-atmosphere phenomenon over the tropical Pacific in which sea-surface temperatures (the El Nino and La Nina ocean part) and the air-pressure seesaw between the eastern and western Pacific (the Southern Oscillation, the atmospheric part) swing together and affect weather worldwide.
That ENSO couples the ocean (El Nino, La Nina) with the atmosphere (Southern Oscillation), the link of El Nino to a weak Indian monsoon, the Walker circulation, and the Tahiti-Darwin index are recurring climatology facts.
ENSO is the combined system; El Nino and La Nina are its ocean phases, while the Southern Oscillation is its pressure-seesaw atmospheric part; El Nino usually weakens the Indian monsoon, La Nina usually strengthens it; it is the Pacific phenomenon, distinct from the Indian Ocean Dipole.
Coupled Pacific ocean-atmosphere swing: El Nino (warm, weak monsoon) and La Nina (cool, good monsoon) plus the Southern Oscillation pressure seesaw.