A group of battleships built to the same design is called a 'class' and is uslayy named after the first ship constructed. For example, the Iowa Class contains four nearly identical battleships, the first of which was named the USS Iowa.
A group of battleships operating together is a task force.
a fleet
Dreadnoughts.
All battleships are strong...otherwise they would not be battleships.
The collective noun is 'a flotilla of battleships'.
Battleships weigh about 50,000 tons
What do you call a group of Dancers?
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.
Battleships are no longer used in modern warfare. They have been replaced by the aircraft carrier support group.
Any group of warships, under the command of an admiral, can be called a fleet. During the Battle of Tsushima in 1905, Admiral Togo only had 4 battleships in his battle-line; the Russian Admiral (Rozhestvensky) had about 8 battleships. They were both battleship fleets.
Who invented the war machines, tanks, battleships, and crossbow?
No. The US Navy did not have that many battleships.
Two battleships (Yamato and Musashi)