You are not only confused, but also being duped. The only kind that would be considered homeopathic are the "highly diluted" ones. And by highly diluted, it means potentially thousands of times (ie: there is virtually no trace amount of the original ingredient in). That is the definition of homeopathy.
Homeopathy is when you take an active ingredient, put it in water, then dilute hundreds or even thousands of times until all the active ingredient is gone. Then by using a concept often referred to as the "memory of water", the nearly distilled water left is supposed to be more powerful than the original compound that contained the active ingredient.
If you have a non-trivial amount of active ingredient, then its naturopathy or even just "medicine". Those are often mislabeled on purpose, so that the real homeopathic treatments (which, being water, are impossibly cheap to produce), get traction.