If you keep it to a reasonable one or two servings a day - yes.
If you are trying to clean yourself out with massive doses then there may be a problem.
Yes, prunes contain no lactose. Lactose is only found in milk and milk products.
The word seldom is an adverb. An adverb of frequency, like often, never, sometime, or always.
Sure! Prunes are a great source of Vitamin A, dietary fiber, potassium, and dihydrophenylisatin, a natural laxative found in prunes.
They can have stones in them. Prunes are dried plums. While many prunes are pitted in the process, some are not. And there is always the risk of missing one in the process.
There are no prunes (dried plums) on Mythology Island. The "pomegranates" (a red edible fruit) are in the Garden of the Sphinx, in a tree just above the Sphinx's head. Use the pomegranates on the altar in the realm of Hades.
Because prunes are already dried and have less moisture to support bacteria.
When plums are dried to become prunes most of the water is evaporated away. It's the moisture that allows the fruit to rot. Drying is a common way of preserving many foods.
Yes. Roughage is the same thing as fiber. Both baked beans (or any kind of beans, really) and prunes (as well as most fruits and vegetables) contain fiber.