Now do this put-the-text-back-together activity.
This is the text (if you need help).
Japanese scientists have made the world's first news-reading robots. They look and act like humans. They also sounded human and had a sense of humour. The scientists showed two robots to reporters. One of them is called "Kodomoroid". Both names use part of the English word "android" with the Japanese words for child and adult. The robots read news on an imaginary earthquake in Tokyo and a raid by the FBI. The robots' creator is a top robotics professor, Hiroshi Ishiguro. He did not say when robots would really read the news on television.
Robots are big business in Japan. Many companies spend a lot of money on making them. They research ways to make robots better and better. Japanese people have a positive image of robots. They think they are helpful and cute. Westerners think robots are a little scary. They worry that robots will take over the world and control us. Professor Ishiguro said: "We will have more and more robots in our everyday lives in the future." He added that they are now not so expensive. He said: "Robots are now becoming affordable - no different from owning a laptop".
Back to the robots lesson.