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the green wire its ground so you have black withe an ground
Black, red, white and green have been the standard colors for house wiring for quite a while. Your question needs to be a little more specific.
In the electrical code in use in the United States, black is the "hot" side of the line, white the "neutral" and green is always "Ground".
Black in a black/red/green set, or blue in a blue/brown/green set. The hot is red or brown and the earth is green (note: I'm in New Zealand and assuming that the colors are the same).
If your house wiring is encased in armoured (metal) sheathing back to the panel, then you can secure the green ground to the ground screw in the box. Make sure the armoured cable connector is tight on the box. This should ground the light back to the panel. If you are on "knob & tube" I would suggest thinking about re-wiring the house.
Red, Yellow and Blue for Live. Black for neutral and Green for Earthing
To short out an electrical cord, all that had to be done if find a way to touch the black conductor to the white or green conductor. Why this would be required is a mystery as most installations strive to stop the shorting of electrical cords and wiring.
green and black
red - brown black - blue green/yellow - green
the green wire its ground so you have black withe an ground
In my house it is green $#@! when I found it I also received a small shock.
Normally Red is the positive connection and Black or Green is negative.
green and black mate
red = phase, black = neutral, green = earth
Black, red, white and green have been the standard colors for house wiring for quite a while. Your question needs to be a little more specific.
In the electrical code in use in the United States, black is the "hot" side of the line, white the "neutral" and green is always "Ground".
i have a burnt wire at the fuse box, its green with a black stripe