Sherwani
Sherwani is a long-sleeved external coat worn by men in South Asia. Like the Western gown coat, it is fitted, with some abdomen concealment; it tumbles to underneath the knees and is fastened down the front. It very well may be collarless, have a shirt-style neckline, or a stand-up neckline in the style of the Mandarin collar. It developed in the Indian subcontinent in the nineteenth 100 years because of the external piece of clothing of the late Mughal period, the angarkha — itself developed from the Persian cape, balaba — being given a western style with a conservative front.