Aitutaki
A triangular Polynesian atoll in the Cook Islands group, ringed by a turquoise lagoon and 15 motu islets.
13 islands ending with the letter I — each with origin, classification, and notes.
This page lists islands that end with I. 13 islands are detailed below. Each entry below is a doorway into a full profile — not just a name on a list.
A triangular Polynesian atoll in the Cook Islands group, ringed by a turquoise lagoon and 15 motu islets.
An Indonesian island east of Java, renowned for Hindu temples, volcanic peaks, terraced rice fields, and a long-running global tourism boom.
A small limestone island in the Bay of Naples famed for the luminous Blue Grotto sea cave.
Oldest and northernmost of the main Hawaiian Islands, nicknamed the Garden Isle for its lush vegetation.
A vast coral atoll in the central Pacific, the largest atoll by land area in the world and the easternmost point of Kiribati.
Smallest publicly accessible Hawaiian island, once the world's largest pineapple plantation and now privately owned.
Second-largest Hawaiian island, formed by two volcanoes joined by an isthmus, known as the Valley Isle.
Fifth-largest Hawaiian island, home to the world's tallest sea cliffs and a famously slow-paced rural lifestyle.
The native Polynesian name for Easter Island, used by its indigenous people and increasingly in official contexts.
A volcanic caldera in the southern Aegean known for cliffside whitewashed villages overlooking a sunken crater.
A distinctively K-shaped Indonesian island with four peninsulas, world-class diving, and the elaborate funeral traditions of the Toraja people.
Largest island of French Polynesia, formed from two volcanoes and home to the capital Papeete.
The westernmost inhabited island of Japan, lying close to Taiwan, known for hammerhead shark dives and a mysterious underwater rock formation.
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