No. It has never been, and by all changes it never will be. Actually, in the late 10th century a group of Icelanders, and some Norwegians inhabited the south western coast of Greenland, the explorer, who was exiled from Norway and Iceland named it Greenland, and yes that was to make it sound better. (No offence to Greenlanders)
And that is why Greenland is part of Denmark today, if anything there is a much higher logical claim that Greenland would be part of Iceland, rather than vice versa.
No. You might be thinking about Greenland.
Or the "Faroe Islands"
Iceland is an island is the Atlantic Ocean lying to the West of the Scandinavian peninsula and no it is not part of Scandinavia.
Yes, Scandinavia is a European region consisting of the countries of Norway, Sweden, and Denmark.
No. You might be thinking of Greenland.
No. Sweden is the largest.
Yes.
They both are, yes. Are you thinking of Greenland? Iceland is not a part of Denmark - Greenland is.
Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, Iceland and the Faroe Islands are all part of Scandinavia.Gurjot Singh Sodhi
The Scandinavian countries are:FinlandSwedenNorwayDenmarkIcelandFaroe IslandsGreenlandGreenland and Faroe Islands is actually a part of Denmark but have home ruling with their own Parliament. They also are members of the Danish Parliament.
The Denmark Strait separates Iceland and Greenland.
Denmark. Iceland isn't flat at all.
sweden, Denmark, norway, Finland, and Iceland
Denmark. (Danish is taught in school in Iceland and Greenland (Greenland is a part of Denmark, even though they have another language)).
iceland
no, not since 1918. Denmark and Iceland had a common King until 1944 when Iceland once again became a republic.
Norway, Sweden, and Denmark are the countries known as Scandinavia.
Norway and Denmark
No, Scandinavia is a part of Europe. It consists of the contries Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Finland and Iceland.