Suppose I am given a $2n$ dimensional manifold $M$ and I want to put a symplectic form on it. How could I determine whether or not it admits one and if I do know that it admits one what are my options for (explicitly) constructing some?
My current knowledge of techniques is the following:
(1) If we are in $\mathbb R^{2n}$ or $\mathbb C^n$ then we can take global coordinates and construct the standard ones.
(2) If we are on a tangent bundle we can construct the canonical one using the tautological 1-form.
(3) If the Riemannian holonomy (assuming we put some metric on $M$ -- although I'm confused about why the metric we choose matters...) group is contained in the symplectic group then we can transfer symplectic forms on $\mathbb R^{2n}$ to $M$. My understanding here though is that we can say the form looks a certain way in certain coordinates at a point on the manifold but not really what it looks like locally.
(4) Brute force- define locally in coordinates and then show well-defined.
(5) And I am aware of this cohomology existence result.
So are there any other techniques? In particular, ways like method $(2)$, where one can construct the form globally but still know what it looks like locally.