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Watching this video (myth #3) brings up a bit of a semantic peeve. And that peeve begins with how the NEC narrowly defines the term "grounding" as only applying to the electrical system itself. Then electricians apply that narrow definition to every use of the term, acting like someone is wrong because they say they're "grounding" something by hooking up it up to an EGC.

But don't worry, they'll teach you this special term "bonding" that refers to the latter. Except it doesn't. I already used a synonym of "bonding" - "hooking up". You "bond" the black wire to the gold terminal on a receptacle by tightening the screw.

> Basically, bond everything together if it can carry a charge

It is perfectly fine to say that you are grounding those things together. Connecting something to an EGC is indeed "grounding it" - just not in NEC land which is focused on getting the EGC grounded. If you say "this washing machine needs to be better grounded", that doesn't mean it needs an immediate connection to earth, but is rather talking about its path to earth via the building's electrical system.



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