X-Fluents are the most highly indulgent, spending more, buying the most frequently and dedicated to maintaining a deluxe lifestyle.
Affluent Americans aged 24 to 49 who have a yen for high living and bling are helping drive luxury sales, says Unity Marketing, which conducts quarterly shopper surveys. One cohort, called the “X-Fluents” -- for “extremely affluent” -- are responsible for 23 percent of luxury sales in the U.S., up from 18 percent in 2007, the Stevens, Pennsylvania-based firm said in a Sept. 14 client presentation it provided to Bloomberg News.
by alex86-91 October 9, 2011

by bootyconsumer777 March 13, 2024

When musicians collaborate on tracks and instead of saying featuring they'd rather use the short terminology "x". This is traditionally used to represent the group of artists as an equal collaboration; their verses shouldn't be seen as a "feature" but rather the second half of the song. "Featuring" however is traditionally used to indicate another artist's addition to the main artist's song, hence the use of the term featuring. Nowadays the traditional uses for these terminologies are recreational.
Example of "X": Musician 1 x Musician 2 - Song Title
Example of "Featuring": Musician 1 - Song Title (Featuring Musician 2)
Example of "Featuring": Musician 1 - Song Title (Featuring Musician 2)
by choppedcheesewithanarizona July 25, 2024

by ChiChiFree February 14, 2018

Person 1: Did you hear that Twitter got changed to X?
Person 2: Yeah, I’m gonna miss that bird logo...
Person 2: Yeah, I’m gonna miss that bird logo...
by ShortStackSnake November 23, 2023

by GabrielW February 23, 2017

Typically used by British people at the end of tweets or text, sometimes used to signify sarcasm or satire.
by sixcfcrows June 12, 2018
