Peter Sblendorio's article introduces an up-to-date form of pants that allows the charging of a phone and a comfortable wear. Sblendorio uses informal diction in his article to inform reader's of the pants, describe the technology involved and to keep the reader's attention throughout. His diction includes the use of charged, specific and polysyllabic words. The charged words generate his positive view that he has on the new pants. The charged words include the following: innovative, designer, subtle, sleek, stylish. His purpose of using specific words is to keep the reader's attention; he states exactly what the article is about, lists the facts and details along with details and this is to ensure that the reader's don't get so bored with reading unnecessary information that they click off and find another article. He uses polysyllabic words to sell to consumer's who may be interested in buying a pair of these pants. Using powerful, specific, multi-syllabic words helps to sell or advertise the pants to potential buyers because he gets right to the point, and they know what exactly they're buying. Sblendorio's overall use of diction implied a keen and content tone. His choice of charged and polysyllabic words showed his interest in the invention yet his informal diction throughout the article showed less enthusiasm and more of his content or satisfaction. Sblendorio's inclusion of positive words in his article shows that he is in favor of these pants and that his reaction to them is a pleased one. His emotional attachment to these pants however, most likely isn't a strong one since they aren't available for men yet, only women. That was one of the disclaimers mentioned in his article, the other disclaimer being that the pants aren't suitable for iPhone 6 Plus users.