Oinos was either fermented or unfermented. You see oinos and automatically take "alcoholic" on it. Yet the text of John 2 proves that the oinos Christ made could not have been alcoholic.
Had it been alcoholic, He would have been contributing to man's drunkenness... further helping them down the road to perditon. Christ did not come to help man in his sin, but to deliver man from his sin.
If only you could grasp that fact.
Sorry but that is wrong, oy'-nos is fermented.
And along with oy'-nos here are the other words used for wine in the NT and their meanings.
oy'-nos: wine, from yah-yin: meaning to effervesce (or fermented). (Used most places throughout the New Testament.)
glyoo'-kos: (or glucose or a liquid fruit sugar), or a syrupy sweet fruit juice. (Used only one time.)
par'-oy-nos: (From two words: 1. Para: near and 2. G3631 wine), meaning addicted to wine. (Used only twice.)
oy-of-loog-ee'-ah: (From two words: 1. G3631 wine and 2. Floo'or-os: bubbly or to talk incessantly), meaning drunkenness or drunk on wine. (Used only once.)