It means that the dip itself is made from kosher ingredients.
Looking at a package it does not appear to have any kosher symbol, so probably not.
It means eating kosher foods.
OUD means the food is kosher and dairy. This is the designation for the Union of Orthodox Judaism.
Kosher means fit (clean) Trayfah means unfit (dirty)
Kosher refers to food that is prepared according to the laws of kashrut. The people who keep kosher are Jews. Kosher is a classification, not a people. That being said, if the nachos and salsa are certified kosher, religious Jews who keep kosher can eat them.
Around the world, commercially produced kosher food is certified as such. This means that kosher restaurants have a certificate of kashrut and grocery items will have symbols from kosher certification organisations.
No. Kosher means that Jewish people can eat it without worrying that they broke their religious laws. Alcohol is not forbidden for Jews.
There is no such thing as "Hanukkah people". Hanukkah is a Jewish holiday celebrated by Jewish people. The holiday of hanukkah doesn't add any food restrictions, other than what Jews already follow. Parmesan dip and chips are okay, but if it's a kosher household, the food must be kosher.
Kosher (כשר) is the Yiddish word for kosher (pronounced kawsher). It comes from the Hebrew word kashér (כשר) which means, "fit for use."
It means that it is block kosher
The word kosher means 'fit'. When describing food as kosher, this means that the food in question is considered fit for eating by religiously observant Jews. Many people believe that food is made kosher when a Rabbi blesses it, however, this is false. In order for food to be kosher, the food has to be prepared following the laws of kashrut. Food that is not prepared following these laws cannot be made kosher after the fact.
Kosher D - kosher dairy: Kosher means that a food is "suitable" according to the Jewish religious rules. Dairy means it is treated as dairy product so religious observant Jews won't eat it together with meat.