yes
Aircraft Carriers, Battleships, and Cruisers, in that order.
No, just one of the famous battleships as it contained the most US sailors killed at Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. The largest US battlewagons are the Iowa class battleships. The largest and most powerful battleship ever built was the Yamato (and her only sister the Musashi).
USS Arizona, USS Utah, and USS Oklahoma are still on the bottom. However, the battleships USS Pennsylvania, USS New York, USS Nevada, and USS Arkansas are also on the bottom...sunk as targets after the war.
No. The US Navy did not have that many battleships.
Carriers, Battleships, Cruisers, Destroyers, and Subs
teak wood
There are many US battleships still in existence. Some are found here; http://www.hazegray.org/navhist/gun_ship.htm
The ONLY US battleships sunk during WW2 were at Pearl Harbor. And all but three were salvaged and put back into service. The three US battleships sunk at Pearl Harbor, and still rest at the bottom of the sea (and Pearl Harbor) are: 1. Battleship USS Arizona 2. Battleship USS Utah (re-designated a anti-aircraft training ship & target ship) 3. Battleship USS Oklahoma (which was raised, sold for metal re-cycling, and towed towards California after the war, where it mysteriously sunk at sea between California and Hawaii).
I'm sure you mean "attacked", and I think you mean "warships", not battleships. I'm also sure the answer is "none", if you mean during the period leading up to the entry of the US in WWI.
Battleships are indicated by a BB as their designation. Currently the US does not have any active duty battleships. Today's cruisers have as much capability, and are as large, as some of the earlier battleships.
No US battleships were sunk during the Viet Nam war.
The old dreadnaught Texas was there. Any of the old US Navy battleships were sent to the Atlantic, the new ones had to fight in the Pacific. The old US Battleships were simply "targets" in the Pacific.