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mull982:
The many different questions you ask in different threads at this site indicates that you need to get some basic electrical education. There is nothing wrong with you asking the questions here, but I think you need to find a junior college and take some basic courses. This might start with various math courses, physics, maybe chemistry, and then basic electrical theory courses.
I do not want to discourage you from asking the questions you do here, and you should continue, but I believe you will advance faster in your understanding of electrical circuit theory by taking some formal courses.
There are three fundamental passive electrical components. These are resistors, capacitors, and inductors. Resistors dissipate energy, ideal capacitors and inductors do not dissipate energy. There is a new fundamental component called a memistor.
All real world components have characteristics of resistance, capacitance and inductance. Every piece of wire is a resistor, inductor, and capacitor. At DC frequency in the steady state it is a resistance. For a very rapid change of voltage applied across it it is an inductor and resists the instantaneous change of current thru it. At DC the wire has a steady state magnetic field around it. At DC and AC frequencies it has an electric field around it thus forms a capacitor.
A carbon composition resistor has wires to it that have a significant inductive effect in the 100 mHz range, and significant capacitance across it.
When ever you measure a voltage it has to be between two points. and a current has to be at a point. If a current is dispersed over an area, then you have to define its distribution over that area or assume it is uniform.
At high frequencies current primarly flows near the surface of an otherwise uniform conductor. Thus, the conductors apparent resistance is higher than its DC resistance.
To your specific question on the various grounding and ungrounded circuits the answer has previously been provided. However to expand. Two wires or other shaped conductors insulated from one another form a capacitor. The windings of a transformer are insulated from the core and maybe some other windings. These all have capacitance between them. Besides this there is leakage resistance between the windings and to the core. Thus, you have a combination of resistive and capacitive coupling to different places. Suppose the transformer core is mounted on large conductive plate. If you measure the voltage with a high impedance meter compared with the impedance of the coupling elements you will get readings that depend upon the relative values of the various leakage elements and the secondary voltage of the transformer. Use a very low impedance voltmeter and your reading will be near zero.
Directly connect any one point on the transformer to the reference plate and the voltage between the plate and any other point on the transformer secondary is that which you would read if the same two transformer points were measured in free space without the reference plate.
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