OK. The Y-Chromosome and mitochondrial markers are, respectively, the patrilineal and matrilineal lines. The other markers, in the X-chromosome, may have come from any of your ancestors - any of the 1024 at the tenth generation back, or may of the million+ at the twentieth generation. So, what exactly do those markers tell you? If you had a way to discover which ancestor it was, you might be able to say something; shoot, you might have potentially inherited that marker from 40% of your ancestors, or 80%, and there is no way to tell. That this or that characteristic on the X-Chromosome can down from one of your ancestors - no hint through which one, just any; at the million ancestor level, most likely more than one. The reason they have X-Chromosome markers checked is for specific reasons about your genome - your ability to develop som,e disease, or resistance to another - nothing about your ancestry, because they cannot get descriptive about it.