The noun 'French' is an uncountable (mass) noun as a word for the language of France or the people of France as a whole.The word 'French' is also an adjective.
"Bloc-notes" is singular. The plural would be "blocs-notes".
Languages is the plural of language
The plural form of language is languages.
in french language depending masculine or feminine let's have a look to this exemple : french woman : femme française french man : homme français french women : femmes françaises french men : hommes français hope this help
In French, "cousines" means female cousins. It is the plural form of "cousine", which refers to a female cousin in English.
The English plural form of "adieu" is "adieux." The foreign plural forms can vary by language, for example in French it would be "adieux," in Spanish it would be "adiós," and in Italian it would be "addii."
A pencil sharpener is "un taille-crayon" (masculine noun) in French, plural "des taille-crayons".
The plural of "agréable" in French is "agréables."
The plural of "bonjour" in French is "bonjours."
A sister is "une soeur" in French. The plural is "des soeurs".
The plural form of rendezvous is rendezvous, with the "s" pronounced (it is silent in the singular). In the French language from which the word originates, the plural form is the same as the singular. In the globalized pidgin "English" of the Internet, you are free to innovate.