Perhaps next time it would be smarter to state the era you are looking for. The earliest ships were made out of (a lot of) wood and nails, and as time progressed the ships would be made out of steel.
All battleships are strong...otherwise they would not be battleships.
To fight a decisive fleet action from the battle-line. It only happened once with steel battleships, at Tsushima in 1905 (never before, nor never since).
The movie Battleship that came out in 2012 was inspired by and very loosely based on the classic board game Battleships or Sea Battle that was made by Milton Bradley.
The collective noun is 'a flotilla of battleships'.
Battleships weigh about 50,000 tons
It demonstrated that "Battlecruisers" shouldn't fight battleships...nor be used like battleships. Battleships are for "slugging it out" with other battleships; battlecruisers are for reconniassance, raiding, and killing cruisers.
Wargaming They also made World of Warplanes Beta, and they will soon add WoWp and World of Battleships.
Who invented the war machines, tanks, battleships, and crossbow?
Two battleships (Yamato and Musashi)
No. The US Navy did not have that many battleships.
Japan had 8 battleships built as such and also 4 fast battleships which had been built as battlecruisers but improved between the wars.
From 1906 to 1944; Britain had about 43 battleships.