No, humans have 23 pairs of chromosomes - so 46 chromosomes.
Every cell (with one exception) has DNA, and consequently the chromosomes. Only red blood cells have no nuclei, and no DNA.
if i remember right its two sets of 23 chromosomes,
no they only contain a fraction of x chromasomes
The sex chromosomes typically found in a human female are two X chromosomes.
autosomes
Humans have two sex chromosomes, the X and the Y. Human females have two X sex chromosomes and are said to be XX. Human males have one X and one Y chromosome and are said to be XY.
The genotype that typically results in a human female is XX. This means that females have two X chromosomes.
Female humans typically have two X chromosomes.
Only in that way do you get a human zygote - each chromosome MUST be paired and there must be 46 total to get a true human. (Note that in reality there are occasional mismatches - either too many or too few - and the result is always a defective child.)
Human females have two X chromosomes (XX) while human males have one X and one Y chromosome (XY). This difference in sex chromosomes determines biological sex and leads to different developmental pathways in males and females.
In an average somatic (body) cell, two. and in human gametes there is , one all chromosomes in human body is , 46 chromosomes. in normal female somatic cell is (44+XX) . in normal male somatic cell (44+XY) in normal female gametes (22+X) in normal male gametes (22+X) or (22+Y) .
The normal monoploid (n) # of a female sex cell is 23 chromosomes
XX