Yes, it always uses a plural verb because it includes more than one thing, person or concept.
The plural form of the word "cod" is "cod." It is considered both singular and plural, meaning that the word does not change when referring to more than one cod fish.
These is the plural of this.
No, the noun 'news' is a mass (uncountable) noun that is always plural in form but is singular in meaning. The noun 'news' is an aggregate noun, a word representing an indefinite number of elements or parts expressed as one thing.
Actually both of the answers below are correct - if you're talking about a single kind of ammunition, then the word could be both singular and plural. If you're talking about several kinds of different ammunition, the plural is ammunitions.
The word "ground" can be both singular and plural. Singular: "The ground is wet." Plural: "The grounds of the park are well-maintained."
You(plural) is the English meaning of the Swahili word nyinyi.
Lance is singular. Lances is plural.
There is no plural the word is the same for both.
Yes, the noun 'trout' is both singular and plural (one trout, two trout). The plural noun 'trouts' is accepted as a word for two or more individual trout, but the food substance is always an uncountable noun.
There is none. Nouns like news are plural in form but singular in meaning, including sciences such as mathematics and physics. News always uses a singular verb.
The plural of the word "system" is "systems"
There is no 'plural form' of the word 'minute'. The word is both singular and plural.