Saki has 1865 apples.

She packs them into crates. Each crate can hold 48 apples.
Work out the largest number of crates that she can fill completely.

1865/48 = 38.854

so, 38 crates will hold 1824 apples, leaving 41 left over

To find the largest number of crates that Saki can fill completely, we need to divide the total number of apples by the capacity of each crate.

Given that Saki has 1865 apples and each crate can hold 48 apples, we can perform the division as follows:

1865 apples ÷ 48 apples/crate ≈ 38.85 crates

Since we cannot have a fraction of a crate, we need to round down to the nearest whole number. Therefore, the largest number of crates that Saki can fill completely is 38 crates.

Saki has 1865 apples. She packs them into crates. Each crate can hold 48 apples. Work out the largest number of crates that she can fill completely.

Answer = 39

1865/48 = 38.854
round off = 39
HENCE PROVE