Does your language have a future tense?

does your language have a future tense?
> English
No, we just add the word "will" in front of the verb, "will" just means a desire or wish.

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We can also add "going to" in front of the verb to make the future tense.
"Have to" is also a future event but it has the sense of an obligation; like devoir/deber/dovere in romance languages.

>Portuguese
Yes
Correrei = I will run
Correrás = you will run
Correreis = you (plural) will run

>Italian
Yes

>Finn
All of those that are possible.

>Russian
>Tatar
Yes

kek, literally speaking spanish

>French
We have 2 futur tenses

linguists are so autistic, why would that not count as a future tense?
>NOO you must conjugate the verb for it to be a tense because... umm... look YOU JUST HAVE TO OKAY?!?

Who the fuck told you that it doesn't count? OP is not a reliable source.

One is like english "verb + present"

Because it's the definition of a tense you fucking retarded mutt

ancient Greek also had a verb that has both meanings as "about to" and "want to" but it still had a wholly conjugated future tense, what's with Germanicoids dropping it in favor of periphrastic forms?

some Italian dialects don't have one either and instead use "have to" or "going to", Sicilian for example.

we do that too sometimes to say something imminent
but the verb is "go"
I will eat = je vais manger

>português e espanhol são similares
Uau! Acabas de fazer uma incrível descoberta, congratulações Pablo

>flag
no
same as english
i will = jeg skal

cool, so
skal = shall and vil = will?

yes, but vil expresses a wish more than an intention
so
jeg vil
would usually be translated to
i want/wish to

>flag
yeah.

ދުވުން = running
ދުވާނެ = will run
ދުވާފާނެ = might run

wtf

I never knew you guys had your own script (and language)