I'll provide the counter point for the sake of discussion and say "yes".
If you spend all your time focusing on learning languages instead of solving the needs of others, what's the point?
However, in the original question I think you are asking about "being familiar with" rather than "knowing". It's good to be familiar with many languages, but spending a month with a language isn't "knowing" the language. I think you probably need at least three or four months of hard-core development with a language to begin to say you know it.
Since you're really asking about what employers are looking for, they are looking for your ability to solve problems and contribute to the bottom line. Putting ten, or even five languages on your resume and you don't have at least as many years of experience as you have languages and it probably won't impress anyone.
