Fish is not dairy. Within the laws of kashrut (kosher dietary laws), there are three categories of food: meat, dairy, pareve. Pareve foods are those that are neither meat nor dairy nor contain derivatives of either. Fish is pareve.
-In general usage, fish is seafood. Dairy refers to milk products, including butter, cheese, ice cream and yogurt.
No chicken is not dairy. Anything made from milk is considered to be dairy: milk, cheese or butter for example.
Fish is neither dairy or meat it is just fish
Mixing dairy and fish is fine according to the laws of kashrut. However, some Jewish groups do not combine fish and dairy as a tradition.
Meat, fish, poultry, oils, dairy, and nuts are examples of foods with protein.
It is considered parve (neutral) and can be eaten with dairy (such as cream cheese and lox). However, some groups do not customarily combine fish with dairy, despite there being no prohibition in the letter of the law. There is, however, a law against combining fish with meat. The two can be had consecutively.
Assuming you are not allergic to either, yes. If you are asking from the perspective of Orthodox Judaism, check out the web link -- not all fish qualify. By the way, Jewish law prohibits eating fish with meat. I would assume it's therefore considered dairy.
If you are: Vegan: You consume no meat, fish, dairy or eggs, in fact anything that is an animal or has come from an animal you avoid. Vegetarian: You consume no meat or fish, but can eat both eggs and dairy as they are not a creature they are a produce of the animal. Pescetarian: This is someone who will not eat meat, but will eat fish, eggs and dairy.
Yes. Also nuts and fish.
either fish, dairy, or hogs
meat and fish also sometimes dairy
A vegan.
fish, penguins fish, penguins fish, penguins
Fish . Eggs . Liver . Oil . Fortified Dairy Products