The egg is a veg. or non veg.?!


Question:

The egg is a veg. or non veg.?

in many olden thinking egg is a non veg. because egg came out from chicken to form chicks.
but now peoples are saying egg is a veg.
I want your opinion for this, Please Answer


Answers:
How can an egg be veg? In my opinion if it didn't come out of the ground or grow off a plant or tree it's not veg!!

The egg is made by the chicken. As long as chicken is not a plant, I think not.

egg is non-veg. because it's came out from chicken to form chicks. in egg a hen has his child. so obevious its non veg. and people eat hen's child.

egg is non veg. no other thinking

Egg is non veg because, it is a life of a chicken and egg contains flesh and blood of the chicken

An egg is the "offspring" of a chicken that has not been fertilized by a rooster. It can be considered veg (I assume you mean vegetable or vegan) because, technically, it isn't a living thing.

Are you from Mars???

In my opinion, egg is Non-veg because it takes insects etc., as diet in eating and formation of egg inside with non-veg items also and baby hen/bird also comes from that egg only and hence, egg is non-veg.

Olden days eggs were come out of fertilized as hens and cocks were in open,Where as in present breeds are developed to give eggs with out any contact with hens and they are unfertilized and have no life. So, many people consider them as vegitarian.

im a vegetarian and i eat em...i figure since the egg was never fertilized its not the same as if it was or whatever...but its certainly not vegan...

It is non-veg

an egg can be vegitarian but its non-vegan.. an egg can become vegetarian by having a vegetarian chiken that only eats seed and plants.

non veg
u r telling is right
bcz it scientificall proven so!!!!!!!!

there r two eggs ,one is veg egg and other is non veg egg.before the chicken does sex it keeps eggs this is called veg egg.and after the sex it keeps egg this is called non veg egg.

Ask yourself: Is an egg animal, vegetable, or mineral? It's animal, so it's not veg.

no.... egg is veg because if you drink milk of cow or any other animal you is veg
but in your thinking the cow is a animal so milk is also non veg in your thinking
Egg is veg .................................

its non veg
because it comes from a chicken and by eating egg you're killing a chick

I don't prefer about olden or new,

I belive that Egg is Non-Veg because It came from hen or chicken.

I belive that even milk also Non-Veg.

non veg

egg falls in the category of non veg

vegans don't eat eggs.
vegetarians can eat eggs, and if they do they are called ovo-vegetarians.

Eggs are vegetarian because the ones you buy at a store probably aren't fertilized.

Egg is a non-veg item.
Eat if you want, if you it is sin do not eat. do not get confused.

i am veg. and still eat them so i believe them veg.

ya thats true do they brethe??

I dont see much difference between eating the egg and eating the bird...the egg forms into the bird...its the same body really.

Eggs are animal products. Some vegetarians eat them, but vegans do not.

It's NOT vegan.
However, vegetarian is debated.
Some people think that vegetarians can eat eggs, while others don't.
It all depends on who you're asking.

Vegetarian or non vegetarian is not the answer needed?
What is Vegetarian? and what is non vegetarian?
When we are eating movable animal,bird and other living creatures we call non-vegetarian: Egg will given birth to a chicken baby: so egg is a pregnant part of a Hen: so it is a non vegetarian

an egg is a chicken period. of course it is non-vegan.

hay Rita.....so long a egg came out of an chicken it
will be always non - veg that will never change.
................regards pari..................




The consumer Foods information on foodaq.com is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for any medical conditions.
The answer content post by the user, if contains the copyright content please contact us, we will immediately remove it.
Copyright © 2007 FoodAQ - Terms of Use - Contact us - Privacy Policy

Food's Q&A Resources