None of the Scandinavian countries have a name with only three letters.
Sweden, Norway, and Finland all are on the Scandinavian Peninsula.
It depends on the definition of "Scandinavia" you are using. If using the narrow definition (which excludes Finland, the Faeroes, Greenland, and Iceland), then there are only three countries in Scandinavia: Sweden Norway Denmark If using the broad definition (which Scandinavians refer to as "Norden," or the Nordic Countries), then: Sweden Norway Finland Denmark
Three countries in the European Union are France, Germany, and Italy.
Denmark, Sweden, Norway.
The three countries on the Scandinavian Peninsula are Sweden, Norway, and Denmark. Culturally, Scandinavia includes all areas where Old Norse was spoken which adds Finland, Iceland, and the Faroe Islands.
The five Scandinavian countries are Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Finland, and Iceland.
The Antarctic Circle doesn't pass through any countries at all.
Three European countries that speak French are France, Belgium, and Switzerland.
Scandinavian Mountains (Norway, Sweden, and Finland) River Thames (United Kingdom) Alps (Monaco, France, Italy, Germany, Switzerland, Liechtenstein, Austria, and Slovenia)
There are only three Scandinavian countries: Norway, Sweden, and Denmark. However, there are five Nordic countries: Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, and Iceland.
The three European countries that make up Scandinavia are Norway, Sweden, and Denmark.