Where are Europe's major peninsulas located in relation to each other?

(The peninsulas my textbook refers to are the Iberian, Italian, Balkan, Jutland, and the Scandinavian Peninsula.)

You and your textbook are right.

:-)

Oops -- those are the major peninsulas. But your question is where are they in relation to each other.

Yes.

What is your answer about their locations in relationship with each other?

This map names all of those peninsulas except for the Jutland Peninsula. It's in northern Europe and contains the country of Denmark.

http://jb-hdnp.org/Sarver/Maps/WC/wc05_europhysgeogm.jpg

The Iberian Peninsula is in the far southwestern part of Europe. The Italian Peninsula is east of the Iberian, and the Balkan is east of the Italian Peninsula. The Scandinavian Peninsula is North of Jutland, in the far northern part of Europe.

Thank you, but may I ask another question?

Why might each peninsula be considered a region?

A: Each peninsula might be considered a region due to the magnitude of them?

No. Keep looking.

What do you mean by the magnitude of them?

A: Each peninsula might be considered a region because each peninsula is a country?

No. The Iberian Peninsula and the Scandinavian Peninsula each contains two countries. Several countries occupy the Balkan Peninsula.