No, because they are completely different.
Vinegar is made from Wine so perhaps using a white or red wine in place of vinegar?
no it can not it will fizz and explode.
Yes, but since balsamic vinegar is stronger, you'll want to use less than you would if you used white wine vinegar.
No, White vinegar is plain Acetic acid in water, but either as a simple chemical mix (usually very cheap or cleaning grade vinegar) or through fermentation of distilled alcohol (akin to Vodka). White wine vinegar is made from the fermentation of real White wine. As such White vinegar has a simple acidic taste, whilst White Wine vinegar retains much of its original White wine taste, with its alcohol replaced by the Acetic acid of vinegar.
No. White wine vinegar is white wine that has been aged after its shelf life. Basically, vinegar is spoiled wine.
no
No. Wine lacks the acidity found in vinegar.
Apple cider vinegar is a vegan product as it uses no ingredients that originate with animals. However, when necessary, another vinegar such as rice vinegar could be used, as could any red wine or simple apple juice combined with a tablespoon or two of white vinegar.
Wine vinegar, red or white, tends to have a lower acidity than white vinegar. If the dish needs the acid (sauerkraut for example) and can handle the extra liquid, you may have to add a bit more wine vinegar. If the flavor is good, however, you don't have to counteract anything.
Ordinary vinegar - or a mixture of white wine and ordinary vinegar.
Malt vinegar, white wine vinegar, white spirit vinegar. Spirit vinegar doesn't taste as good as any of the brewed vinegars. The closest substitute is probably white wine vinegar mixed with an equal quantity of apple juice. Failing that, mix apple juice with malt vinegar. Red wine vinegar would give a taste that you might not want.
I'd recommend white vinegar, rather than white wine vinegar. White vinegar is made from grain, and has very few impurities beyond the acid itself. Impurities are what make vinegar taste good, which is why they're in most cooking or salad vinegars, but when you're cleaning, you just want the mild acid of the vinegar itself. White (grain) vinegar is very cheap and available at any grocery store.