No and Yes.
If we use a truly technical definition of vegan, then these items should be kosher pareve (if they are kosher), not kosher dairy. Kosher dairy requires there to be some type of dairy ingredient, which should make a product vegetarian, not vegan (since vegan products lack dairy by definition). However, the "standards" of dairy non-presence in vegan certification and the minimal requirements of dairy presence in kosher "standards" have some overlap. (I.e. Imagine that the vegan standard is 10 ppm of dairy as a maximum and the kosher dairy standard is a minimum of 5 ppm dairy. Any amount 5 < x < 10 ppm will qualify under both standards.) Any amount of dairy in this overlap will be both vegan and kosher dairy.
For an item to be labeled Parve, It must have no trace of either meat or milk products in it. This means that an item may cannot be labeled as Parve and dairy at the same time.
If a Parve item is stored in a milchig (dairy) container it becomes a dairy product.
No. It has to be one or the other.
Jews consider dairy products kosher as long as they are not from forbidden animals or nothing is added to the product to render it non-kosher, such as rennet in cheese. Additionally, some Jews will only use products labeled 'chalav Yisroel', these are dairy items that have Jews directly involved in their production.
"Kosher" is an adjective. "Kashrut" is a noun.Kosher means foods that are allowed according to the Jewish law. The word "Kashrut" has the same grammatical root and would be used in a sentence like "what is the standard of kashrut on this food;" while "kosher" would be used in a sentence like "who certifies that this is kosher."
It is the same fuse labeled for the door locks, "DR UNLK"
Yoghurt tends to have a more sour flavour than mayonaise, and will not keep as well if you don't intend to eat it straight away. It is not exactly an adequate substitute for most dishes other than to replace sour cream or creme fraiche. Perhaps try cream cheeses to substitute. If you want to use a substitute for dietary reasons, prehaps replace mayonaise with hummous.
dairy? there is nothing in Islam ( that i know of ) that says anything about dairy..so its the same as anyone else's lifestyle.
KD means that the food is kosher and either contains dairy or was made on the same equipment used for dairy items.K= KosherD= Dairy
I take it you want to create a list that is numbered. A basic list using bullets (small black circles) starts with the tag <ul> and each item listed with the tags <li>item one </li> <li>item two </li> </ul> (end list) will result in: * Item one * item two For a numbered list instead of a bullet list use <ol> (ordered list) instead of <ul> (unordered list) to start. for example <ol> <li>item one</li> <li>item two</li> </ol> This will result in: # item one # item two Inside a list item <li>you can put paragraphs, line breaks, images, links, and also other lists.</li>
nothing it doesn't matter if you don't eat dairy you will still look the same
Jews dont.
If the item is already in motion, yes; it will continue to move in the same direction and at the same speed.
no it does not it weighs the same
the item i bought is same as saying i purchased an item. It means buy.