You have 22 pairs of autosomal chromosomes in a cell and 1 pair of sexomal chromosomes in that same cell.
There are 22 pairs of autosomal chromosomes in a human somatic cell, for a total of 44 autosomes. These chromosomes are the same in both males and females.
If you mean how many; there are 46, or 23 homologous pairs. There are 22 autosomal pairs and the sex chromosomes (X and X/Y). This can vary in some disorders, such as Down Syndrome, Turner Syndrome, Klinefelter's Syndrome, and Triple X Syndrome.
In a "normal" human autosome (normal cell, not a sex cell), there is 23 pairs of chromosomes.
46 chromosomes. 23 pairs
In a human cell it would be 23 pairs.
There are 22 pairs of autosomal chromosomes in a human somatic cell, for a total of 44 autosomes. These chromosomes are the same in both males and females.
Humans have 22 pairs of autosomal chromosomes, totaling 44 autosomal chromosomes. These chromosomes are inherited from both parents and dictate traits such as hair color, eye color, and height.
In humans, there are 22 pairs of autosomal chromosomes and 1 pair of sex chromosomes (XX in females or XY in males) in somatic cells. Therefore, there are 0 unpaired chromosomes in a normal human somatic cell.
If you mean how many; there are 46, or 23 homologous pairs. There are 22 autosomal pairs and the sex chromosomes (X and X/Y). This can vary in some disorders, such as Down Syndrome, Turner Syndrome, Klinefelter's Syndrome, and Triple X Syndrome.
There's no good reason for it; the number of chromosomes an animal has doesn't really have much to do with anything.
A human diploid cell has 23 pairs of chromosomes.
In a "normal" human autosome (normal cell, not a sex cell), there is 23 pairs of chromosomes.
23 pairs
46 chromosomes. 23 pairs
There are 22 autosome pairs and one pair of sex chromosomes.
64
23 pairs in each cell