A peninsula is a body of land surrounded by water on all sides but one, and the word has 9 letters, but no hyphen.
An area of land surrounded by water is called an island.
A body of land with water on three sides is called a peninsula. This geographical feature is surrounded by water on three sides and connected to the mainland on the fourth side. Examples include the Iberian Peninsula in Europe and the Arabian Peninsula in the Middle East.
A lake is the biggest body of water that is surrounded by water on all sides. The largest lake in the world is the Caspian Sea - so called because it is comprised of salt water and the ancient Romans called it a sea like every other salt water body they had encountered. However, as the Caspian Sea is bounded by land on every side, it is by definition a lake.
Lake.
Peninsula
A body of land extending out into water with water on three sides is called a peninsula. Peninsulas are surrounded by water on three sides and connected to a larger landmass on the fourth side.
A peninsula is land with water on three sides (at its point and on two sides), but connected to a larger body of land.
Lake.
A peninsula is a body of land surrounded by water on three sides. This describes Saudi Arabia. An island is a body of land surrounded by water on all sides.
A peninsula (which means "almost an island") is a relatively narrow body of land that sticks out into a body of water, and is surrounded on all sides but one by the water. (The other side is attached to a larger body of land.) A bay, on the other hand, is a body of water largely surrounded by land. Only a small part connects to the rest of the water (e.g., the ocean.)
A bay is a body of water that is surrounded on three sides by land. A peninsula is a land mass surrounded on three sides by water