No will is not always a verb.
Will is a modal auxiliary verb and will+ verb is the most common way of indicating the future in English
I will phone you tonight.
Will can also be a main verb and means to use the power of your mind to do something or to make something happen:
She willed her eyes to stay open
OR to formally give your property or possessions to somebody after you have died, by means of a will:
Joe had willed everything he possessed to them.
Will can also be a noun and means a legal document that says what is to happen to somebodies money and property after they die:
My father left me the house in his will.
Or as a noun will can mean a feeling of strong determination to do something that you want to do:
In spite of what happened, he never lost the will to live.
Always is not a verb, it in an adverb of frequency.
In the sentence "He has always thought about his future," the verb phrase is "has always thought." While "thought" is the verb, a verb phrase includes words that may affect the tense of the verb.
A singular subject always has a singular verb.
In the sentence, "he has always thought about his future" the verb phrase is "has always thought".
I think the verb is future always is definitely an adverb
Always is an adverb.
"Warrant" can be used as a noun or verb, but "warranted" is always a verb.
In the sentence "He has always thought about his future," the verb phrase is "has always thought." While "thought" is the verb, a verb phrase includes words that may affect the tense of the verb.
Do is always a verb either a main verb or an auxiliary verb.
Every sentence needs a verb. No matter what, there's a verb.
Were is always a verb. In the example, it's an auxiliary verb.
no a direct object will always be after the verb.