yes
yes, it is singular.
The singular form of "genera" is "genus".
No, was is past tense. It is used for first and third person singular subjects.I was (first person singular)We were (first person plural)You were (second person singular and plural)He/She/It was (third person singular)They were (third person plural)
The possessive form of the singular noun yesterday is yesterday's.Example: There was an article about that in yesterday's newspaper.
Memory
The word 'never' is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb. Adverbs don't have singular or plural forms. Example:He never came to the party.They never came to the party.
The correct sentence is "He never has a job" because "has" is the correct singular verb form to match the singular subject "he." "Have" is the plural form of the verb and would not be correct in this context.
no, the Holocaust was a singular event, there was no other and there never will be.
The possessive form of the singular noun waltz is waltz's.example: I never saw him again after the waltz's end.
It would be incorrect to say "this headquarters"... it would have to be "those headquarters." I've never heard it used in any singular form. You would have to say "this headquarter" which is never used.
The noun "cattle" is only plural, never singular; a plural uncountable noun, a word for domesticated bovines as a group.
Plier would be the singular, but for some reason is never said that way.
"Eat some fruit." is correct English. Fruit is both singular and plural. "Fruit" is always treated as a singular noun and used in the singular and is never plural.
The plural form for the noun monitor is monitors.
It is hard to explain. Not necessarily third person. But, instead plural. Singular is also occasionally used, but never in 1st person. So 1st person is used but never 1st person singular. 'We' is used. 'We' is 1st person plural. 'She' is also used which is 3rd-person singular. 'You' is used occasionally. Which is 2nd person singular Until towards then end. In the end he discovers the word 'I'. So first singular is then used.
The noun wars is the plural form of the singular noun war.The singular possessive form is war's.The plural possessive form is wars'.Examples:Our city was in ruins by the war's end. (singular)The wars' cost in lives in the twentieth century should never be repeated. (plural)
A bit is an eighth of a dollar, but in this sense it is never used in the singular. Two bits is a quarter.