Iceland being an independent country, belongs to the Icelanders or citizens of Iceland. Iceland is a member of the UN (November 19th, 1946), NATO, EFTA, EEA and OECD. Iceland's membership of EFTA-a European trade bloc-means that it is not currently a member of the European Union. In addition to these organisations, Iceland is the sole partner of the Faroe Islands signatury to the Hoyvík Agreement. Unlike Greenland, Iceland DOES NOT belong to Denmark!
Yes
The British Isles is just a geographical term. The islands in it do not belong to any one country. There are a number of countries in it, most notably Ireland and also the United Kingdom. Iceland is an independent country. Corsica belongs to France. Sardinia and Sicily belong to Italy.
Peru is in South America, (is that what you meant?) it does not belong to any other country in Europe,Peru has its own government.,
Islands do not physically belong to any one continent (since a continent is a continued piece of landmass), however, they do belong to continents in political terms. Iceland was conquered by Scandinavians, a European ethnic group, for a long period of time. Because of this, it has been dominated by European culture, language, etc. So it is said to belong to the continent of Europe.
Iceland is not in any state. It is its own country.
Eastport. It is closer to the European country of Iceland, than any other city or town in Maine.
It's not on any one continent, it's an island. However, most people consider it part of Europe.
France has the largest birth rate of any country in Europe at 2.08. It has the 110th largest birth rate of any nation. There are a few countries that are not too far behind: Ireland (2.01), United Kingdom (1.91), and Iceland (1.89).
Iceland is the country which is more free from mosquitoes, than any other.
Greece is a country. It does not belong to any state. It is however, part of the European Union (EU)
It is not associated with any country in particular
Yes, of course. Iceland has a modern economy, like any Western European country.
There are over 50 independent countries in Europe, each of which has their own democratic government. They do not belong to any one single government. 28 of Europe's countries are members of an organisation called the European Union, but that is not a government or a country. It is an organisation that has independent countries as members.