Futuro
"Futuro" in Spanish means "future" in English.
Mi futuro.
habré, habrás, habrá, habremos, habréis, habrán
Will is "Voluntad" in Spanish. Like talking about Will power. If it's the "will" for future, like "I will do this", it's more complex because the the verb must change to its future form.
present, past, future, those are the basic tenses for Spanish, the you can have the preterit etc....
Whenever you say "will" in spanish, you have to use some conjugation of the future tense. To conjugate verbs in the future tense, you leave the verb whole and add the future tense to the end. The future tense ending for 'He' is á He will eat: Comerá He will sing: Cantará He will be: Estará
I will love you (in the future)
you mean futuro and it means: future
To make efforts to learn Spanish, It could be very good for you in the future.
The infinitive form of "decide" in Spanish is decidir. Conjugating it in the future tense, we have: yo decidiré tú decidirás él decidirá nosotros decidiremos ellos decidirán
Yes and no. If you want to say "I am going to eat" as the near-future of "eating", the Spanish is "Yo voy a comer" which requires two verbs "ir" (to go) and the verb that is going to be done. If you want to say "I will eat" as the indicative future of "eating", the Spanish is "Yo comeré" which only requires the conjugation of the relevant verb.
"Mañana" is a Spanish word that means "tomorrow" or can also refer to "in the future" or "some undefined time in the future."