
In Western society today, many can recognize the subtleties that separate those with and without, for lack of a better term, "It." One can spot It with surprising ease.
Those with It speak with greater grace and clarity on topics that hold attention without ostentatious delivery or overly attenuated volume. Their It-speak is perfect, with graceful alides, puctuated staccattos, effortless yet obvious accomplishments in vocal, glottal, dental and labial coordination. The It resort seldom to intentional rhyme or other obvious grammatical instrument, preferring to wax with rapt elocution on mesmerizing thoughts, with deftly constructed sentences and dizzying logic, and always with self-depracating humility.
Those with It dress like everyone else, in shirts and pants and dresses and shoes; but with It they look better. The same clothes on those with It fit better than they would on the rest of us, molding their bodies like well hung draperies, clinging to and accenting their better attributes while invisibly drawing notice from what many would consider physical detriments. No matter what we may pay to dress as well, we can only pale in comparison to those dressed with and by It.
Most commonly, those with It have in their command and possession more material wealth. One can denote the choice home or homes, the better automobiles, bespoke clothing and footwear, mechanical timepieces worn loosely and casually on the wrist that often mesh more moving parts in their works than most automobiles. Other accoutrements that draw the eye and the mind to the It conclusion and must therefore be noted include the casual bangles, baubles and trinkets pinned, clasped, pierced and hung from It bodies and clothes that command respectful glances and monetary appraisals.
These differences of distinction often find a source in early rearing. The It often come from sound genetic stock, parentage with plenty of It to share with the world. The wealth mentioned above allows their children attend the finest schools, institutions that often inculcate more than educate, instilling a distillation of higher quality in poise, outlook, diction, and other of the social graces obvious to even the most jaded or oblivious observer.
However, a caution: with all the shining and lofty language one can summon to express that inexpressible quality one sees in those with It, one should never, and I do mean this as an absolute prohibition without possible exception or allowance, refer to It with certain base terms.
Fer example, It ain't never right to sayz thems with It is "classy."