What is the difference between vegetarians, vegans, and veganism?!
What is the difference between vegetarians, vegans, and veganism?
Answers: Vegans and veganism are basically the same thing, just one is a noun and the other is modified by the ism.
Vegetarians don't eat meat. No beef, pork, poultry, nothing. Some of them eat fish and some don't because some don't consider fish to be meat.
Vegans don't eat any biproducts of animals. So, this means no dairy products...cheese, milk, ice cream, eggs, so on. Anything an animal helped produce, vegans don't eat.
Hope that helps. vegetarians dont eat meat,such as beef/game etc,but some will eat poultry,turkey/chicken/seafood... vegans dont eat any animal product at all,no eggs nothing that had anything to do with any animal ever.. Vegetarians do not eat dead animals (of ANY kind, including fish) or products made from them, but may opt to include animal foods from living animals (dairy and eggs.) Vegans do not eat, wear or use any products of animal origin, including wool, leather and honey. Mockingbird is right and only the first part of the first poster is correct.
No vegetarian eats fish or poultry. That sort of defeats the definition found in the dictionary. Anyone that eats animal flesh along with plant matter is an omnivore..plain and simple.