As others have posted, a few countries use 3 phase 220 or 230 volts with 220/230 volts between phases and no neutral.
However such systems are increasingly being considered as obsolete and I very much doubt that many are being installed these days, though of course old equipment may remain in service.
Many such systems DO in fact have a neutral and should be correctly called 3 phase, 4 wire at 127/220 volts, however the neutral is often unused and may not exist beyond the POCO transformer. All loads on such a system are 220/230 volt.
The drawback of such a system is that they use a lot of copper relative to the load served and revenue produced.
Such systems are also vulnerable to theft of electricity.
Other systems are true 3 phase, 3 wire, with no neutral, obtained from a delta transformer.
The voltage between each phase and ground on such a system will vary according to the degree of leakage from each phase to ground. The system tends to unreliable as a ground fault in one house can put out the neighbours lights !
Virtually all new systems throughout Europe will be 3 phase, 4 wire, with 230 volts between any phase and neutral, and 400 volts between phases.
A 3 phase system at 230/400 volts can transmit a lot more power over the same size cable than a 127/220 volt system.
The only merit of 127/220 volts was decades ago when lamps and small appliances were often 125/127/130 volts.