This is somewhat complicated. To the north you have the Barents Sea, on the coast of Finland. To the west, on the coast of Norway you have the Norwegian Sea. Bodies of water that actually touch Sweden are: In the east you have to Bay of Bothnia, the Gulf of Bothinia and farther south the Baltic Sea. To the southwest of Sweden you have the Skagerrak inlet (sea) and the straits of Kattegat. The Skagerrak inlet (or sea) ties into the North Sea to the southwest.
Sweden is border on the west by the country of Norway and on the northeast by the country of Finland. The Gulf of Bothnia runs along the East coast of Sweden. Southeast of Sweden is the Baltic Sea. To the Southwest are the Danish Straits, the Kattegat/Kattegatt (spelling depends on whether you are Danish or Swedish) and Skagerrak which connect the Baltic Sea to the North Sea
Hudson Bay and Atlantic Ocean
The major straits in Asia include Bab el Mandab, Strait of Malacca, Bering Strait, Strait of Hormuz and Bosporus and the Dardanelles. A strait connect two large bodies of water together.
The Strait of Bosporus connects the Black Sea to its north with the Sea of Marmara to its south.
A strait is simply a smaller version of a channel Both connect two bodies of water with land on either side.
The Davis Strait connects Baffin Bay with the Atlantic Ocean.
A strait is a narrow channel connecting two bodies of water.
A Strait is a narrow passage of water connecting two larger bodies, as in the Strait of Gibraltar or Strait of Magellan, the Strait of Georgia
A narrow body of water that connects two larger bodies of water (oceans?) is a strait. Examples are the Strait of Gibraltar, Malacca Strait, Yucatan Strait, Strait of Dover, and so on.
A narrow body of water connecting two larger bodies of water is called a Strait.
Strait of Gibraltar