no because if you are fully driving and not taking the fairy that crosses lake Michigan then the answer is no but if you count crossing the lake as still driving then yes.
You can also drive to the northeast corner of Wisconsin and drive into the Upper Peninsula of Michigan.
There are two Michigans. Western and Eastern Michigan. Western Michigan is on Wisconsin's Northern Border. Eastern Michigan is on the other side of Lake Michigan directly across from Wisconsin. To get from E. Mich. to Wis., without crossing any other states; go north, across the bridge connecting the two land masses, and then drive south to Wis. Otherwise, in order to get from E. Mich. to Wis, you have to go through Northern Indiana, Illinois, and then to Wisconsin.
No, you would have to go through Lake Michigan.
Yes they can.
Yes you can.
yes
Yes, by heading north into Michigan's Upper Peninsula.
YES, you can drive from Wisconsin to Michigan without crossing any other states!
Yes, by traveling north through Michigan's Upper Peninsula.
yes you can because they are right next to each other
Yes. The upper peninsula of Michigan touches right against north eastern Wisconsin.
Yes
Yes, you'd drive north to Canada, then driveacross Canada and go south into Michigan.
Michigan (MI) has land borders with Ohio, Indiana, and Wisconsin. The closest state without physically touching Michigan is Illinois. However, Michigan also shares water borders with Minnesota and Illinois across the Great Lakes. Taking this into account, the closest state without bordering Michigan would be Pennsylvania.
No
A stile is a method of crossing from one side of a fence to another without using a gate.
Voy a Detroit, Michigan. The above is a translation of "I am going to Detroit, Michigan," not "Going to Detroit, Michigan" which is impossible to properly translate without context. If this clause is to provide the scenery to another event, it should be translated as "Yendo a Detroit Michigan" such as the following example, "Going to Detroit, Michigan, I noticed a deer crossing the road." This would be "Yendo a Detroit Michigan, anoté que un ciervo cruzaba la calle." If this clause is to describe an activity, it should be translated as "Ir a Detroit, Michigan" such as the following example, "My family loves going to Detroit, Michigan." This would be "A mi familia le encanta ir a Detroit Michigan."
You don't cross a state peeps!