island is the correct answer.
That is called an ocean.
Land smaller than a continent completely surrounded by water is called an island.An island.IslandThis would be an island.an area of land COMPLETLEY surrounded w/[with] water is an island ANS2:An island is only surrounded by water around the edges. The top is covered by air and the bottom by rock. It isn't likely that you will find an area of land completely surrounded by water. A submerged seamount would be surrounded by water on all sides but the bottom.You did say "Completely".an islandan islandisland
An island is surrounded by water, while a lake has land all around it.
An area of land surrounded by water on all sides is called an island.
The body of water mentioned is an island. It is a piece of land that is completely surrounded by water.
That is called an ocean.
An area of land surrounded by water is called an island.
An area of land surrounded by water is called an island.
The land area where a river collects water is known as its watershed or drainage basin. This is the area of land where all the water that falls within its boundaries flows into a specific river or stream.
island
The homophone for a passage in a church (aisle) and a land with water all around (isle) is "isle."
The passage in a church refers to the aisle, while land with water all around it is an isle - both are homophones.
aisle, isle
A watershed is an area of land that drains to a common body of water.
It is an Oasis.
Asia has the largest land area of all the continents. It covers around 30% of the Earth's land area and is home to the highest population of any continent.
LAND AREA means all water features are to be excluded. The size of a state has three measurements: LAND, WATER, and TOTAL (land + water). A lot of people confuse LAND to mean TOTAL AREA. LAND AREA ONLY: 1. Russia: land: 16,995,800 sq km (excluding all water) 2. China: land: 9,326,410 sq km (excluding all water) 3. United States: land: 9,161,923 sq km (excluding all water) 4. Canada: land: 9,093,507 sq km (excluding all water) Source: https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/