<em>Minnesota, constituent state of the United States of America. It became the 32nd state of the union on May 11, 1858. A small extension of the northern boundary makes Minnesota the most northerly of the 48 conterminous U.S. states. (This peculiar protrusion is the result of a boundary agreement with Great Britain before the area had been carefully surveyed.) Minnesota is one of the north-central states. It is bounded by the Canadian provinces of Manitoba and Ontario to the north, by Lake Superior and the state of Wisconsin to the east, and by the states of Iowa to the south and South Dakota and North Dakota to the west.
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hop this helps
The answer to this B i hope its right
One of them is Islamic, but I don’t know the other one, sorry.
Answer:
1. Avicenna
Avicenna was a Persian polymath who was one of the most significant physicians, atronomers, thinkers, and writers of the Islamic Golden Age. He wrote the medical materpiece, "The Canon of Medicine," which influenced European medicine. It become the standard in medical universities and was used until 1650.
2. Averroes
Ibn Rushd, also known as Averroes, was a Muslim Andalusian philosopher and thinker. He thought about many subjects, such as philosophy, theology, medicine, physics, law, and linguistics. In his philosophical work, he wrote about the ideas of Greek philosophers Plato and Aristotle. He attempted to restore the original thinkings of Aristotle.
3. Maimonides
Moses ben Maimod, commonly known as Maimonides, was a Sephatic Jewish philosopher. He specialized in the study of the Jewish Torah and was one of the most influencial Torah scholars of the Middle Ages.