The Irish Sea does, but at the northern end of it there is the North Channel and at the southern end is St. George's Channel, both of which are also between Ireland and Britain.
The Irish Sea lies between the two.
Ireland and England are two separate countries on two separate pieces of land with the Irish Sea in between them, and having no land border. It is a sea between two islands. Ireland is one of those islands and England is part of the other one. See the Related Link below.
The Irish Sea.
The Irish Sea.
Ireland is geographically part of the British Isles. So on that basis, there is no answer to the question. What you are referring to is the sea between Ireland and Britain. That is the Irish Sea.
The Irish Sea is the body of water that lies between Ireland and England.
The Celtic Sea and the Irish Sea.
The Irish Sea separates the islands of Ireland and Great Britain. It is connected to the Celtic Sea in the south by St George's Channel, and to the Atlantic Ocean in the north by the North Channel.
The Irish Sea separates Ireland and Britain.
The Irish Sea lies between England and Ireland. It would not be described as a strait as it is too wide.
Ireland, Scotland, Wales and England.
Scotland and Wales, then across the Irish Sea the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland.
Between England and Ireland in the middle of the Irish Sea
England and Wales are connected by land but there is a body of water between parts of England and Wales. The body of water between the south-west of England and the South of Wales is the Bristol Channel, it is not a sea. Though to the north of Wales there is the Irish Sea.
The sea between Britain and Ireland is the Irish Sea.