Usually - No.
Normally, both men and women have 12 ribs on each side.
But there's some room for personal variation due to birth "defects" and certain surgeries.
Males and Female humans both have 2 pairs of floating ribs, those are ribs #11 and #12.
Ribs 11 and 12. Ribs 11 and 12 do not have any connection with the sternum.
We have a total of 20 ribs, ten being on each side.
The ribs attached to 11 and 12 do not connect to anything in the front of the body. They are said to be, "Floating".
Twelve ribs on each side usually. However some individuals can have superonumeracy ribs and have 13 on each side. Other can have less ribs, 10-11 on each side.
upper ribs
Twelve pair is the norm, but about 5% have one or more extra ribs.
Three types of ribs we have are True ribs, False ribs, and Floating ribs.
Humans normally have 14 true ribs on the front of their bodies, and 10 false ribs. True ribs are attached directly to the sternum (breastbone) at the front of the body, and the false ribs are not.
Humans have 5 false ribs. Ribs 8-12 are considered false ribs because they do not have a piece of costal cartilage that connects them directly to the sternum. Ribs 11 and 12 are also considered floating ribs because they do not have any costal cartilage and don't connect to the sternum at all.
They are both the same.
False