My wife and I went to Korea a few years ago with her family to visit some in-laws and see the country. The wife and I split off for a bit to explore Seoul on our own and when it came time to meet back up, we were going to take the subway to the bus station, and then take the bus out to where her aunts and uncles lived.
Neither my wife or I speak great Korean. We do OK, but we aren't great. Her youngest sister though, she's really good. We got her sister on the phone to tell us which bus to get on and where to get off. Her sister was trying to relay instructions from her aunt and basically said something like "Get off where the sign says "Mireh (미래)". There must have been chaos at the aunts house because she had to hang up and she sounded pretty stressed out.
Well, No problem, we thought, that sounds easy enough. We went up the ticket window and I said in Korean "I would like 2 tickets for the bus that goes to 미래". The lady says "What?" so I repeated myself. The people selling the tickets looked at us funny, and looked at each other, and again said "where are you trying to go?" and I said "미래!!!!" One of them laughed and finally said "we don't sell tickets to 미래".
"where can I buy tickets for the bus to 미래?"
"Try outside" they said, and laughed.
I went outside to where the city buses were and said "I would like to take a bus to 미래". Again we were getting funny looks and nobody would help us. I was starting to get pretty angry.
Finally a Korean guy came up to us and offered to help us out. He spoke perfect English. Thank God. I told him English that we were trying to take the bus to 미래. Then even HE looked confused. We called our Aunt and he spoke to her and Korean and figured out where we needed to go, helped us get out tickets, and told the bus driver to let us know when to get off. I guess at the stop there was a sign for the "미래 Bookstore", and that was where we were supposed to get off.
So what does 미래 mean then? Why was everybody treating us weird? We asked our Korean helper. "미래 means 'the future'".
My wife and I looked at each other and just about died laughing. To this day we still laugh about the time we tried to buy tickets for a "Bus to the future".
Thats my story.