Luggage is an English word which stays the same in the plural form. She had loads of luggage when she got on the plane.
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In general 'no'. 'luggage' is uncountable in grammar, which means it doesn't have a plural form. There may be some context in which “luggages” might be used, but in any case you can't use “luggages” instead of “luggage.”
This type of noun is called a noncount noun. Things like milk, air, homework, and luggage are noncount nouns and do not have plural forms. (Click here for a list of more noncount nouns.) Below are some examples of much used with noncount nouns.
Suitcases are the same as luggage, but you cannot say two luggages as luggage is a mass noun. When you travel you have luggage, or two pieces of luggage. Mass nouns use measure words like pieces of to make plurals.
Common nouns are everywhere. Look around you now and you will see many common nouns: door, window, tree, sky, cat, truck, road, computer, phone, bottle, ball, luggage, people, hair.