Uuh, first of you didn't understand the point. Secondly, we now have switched positions? Huh, how can this be? You are now making my argument, while I was making one to explain where your misunderstanding came from.
Yes, if we talk about science water is H2O. But what does the 'word' water mean, what is its definition?
Pure water doesn't exist in nature. If there is a lake filled with water it doesn't mean it's all H2O. There is all kinds of other stuff, either dissolved or not, in the water. The same goes for the water you either buy bottled in the supermarked or which comes out of the tap.
All this water will have small quantities of salts and metals. This does not prevent us from calling it water, eventhough in science we strictly mean H2O.
But let's take this even further. If these small quantities in water are sugars then we stop calling it water. It will be called Lemonade. In the case of tea the apperance will be changed, it will be much less transparent.
But now lets compare different kinds of waters with lemonade and tea. If we take water from a pond the water will be coloured, either brownish or greenish. Very much like tea. But we don't say ponds are filled with tea, they are filled with water.
If we take sea water, this will have a very different taste compared to normal water. The same goes with lemonade. But still sea water is called water.
Now we let a scientist in a lab count how many H2O molecues each of these substances actually contains. If one does that one will still not be able to compute what we call water and what we don't. Some kinds of waters will have much less H2O then some kinds of tea or lemonade, but they are still called water.
This is what I mean with philosophical. This goes back to Aristotle who knew what a chair was but he didn't knew why he knew. So he got as many chairs as he could and lined them up, trying to find some property they all had.
This is not so easy. We construct words without thinking about it, it all works. But when we do think about it we cannot figure it out.