Yes, languages is a plural noun.
The plural form of language is languages, e.g. "They speak several different languages at their home.
That is the French spelling (langues) of the plural noun meaning languages.
The correct spelling of the plural noun is languages.
Sacramento is a word in various languages. In Italian it is a noun and a verb. In Spanish it is a noun.
The word for a person who speaks two languages is bilingual.The word 'bilingual' is both a noun and an adjective.
A bilingual (can be verb or noun) is a person fluent in two languages.Bilingualism is the practice or ability to speak two languages fluently.
The plural form of the noun 'bilingual' (a person fluent in two languages) is bilinguals.The word 'bilingual' is also an adjective, used to describe a noun (a bilingual student).The noun bilingualism is the practice or ability to speak two languages fluently.
Natural gender languages assign gender to nouns based on the actual gender of the living beings they represent, such as English. Grammatical gender languages assign gender to nouns based on arbitrary rules, such as Spanish or French. In natural gender languages, gender is inherent to the noun's meaning, while in grammatical gender languages, gender is a grammatical feature that may not correspond to the noun's actual gender.
An animacy is the characteristic of a noun, in some languages, which is dependent on its living or sentient nature.
The word language is a noun. The plural form is languages.
The word "Ugandan" by itself is a noun for the Ugandan Languages (of which there are more than 40) or a citizen of the country of Uganda. Otherwise the word "Ugandan" is an adjective modifying the following noun. The word "Uganda" is a noun for a country whose citizens are referred to as "Ugandans" which is also a noun.