Bowing her head in greeting, she says, “Annyeonghaseyo.” Perhaps the first word anyone who enters the world of Korean gets to hear. It could mean hello or hi, good morning or afternoon or evening, but it literally means “to be at peace” or, said with a question mark, “Are you at peace?” (from ‘annyeong’—peace in Korean—and ‘haseyo’, a standard ending for words that means ‘to do’ or ‘to be’). The 17-year-old wishing you peace is dressed in a ‘chima jeogori’, a skirt-top ensemble, and a ‘po’ jacket, patterned on the attire Koreans have worn since antiquity with the earliest visual depictions traced back to the period from 57 BCE to 668 CE. The men wear loose-fitting ‘baji’ trousers instead of the ‘chima’.