Actually the word is communicate. Is the reader or listener understanding what you are saying?
Also who is the intended audience?
If I ask someone from the general public if their poco installed a GEC to the HID luminaire on the pole in their yard, Then...
However if I ask the person from the general public if there is a bare copper wire running up the pole to the light, then that is wording they can understand.
Then for me, codes (and laws) which have multiple references to codes/laws elsewhere in the book, are sometimes impossible to understand. For example...
Notwithstanding ORS 90.510 (4), after 30 days? written notice, a landlord may unilaterally amend a rental agreement for a manufactured dwelling or floating home that is subject to ORS 90.505 to 90.840 to provide for service or delivery of written notices by mail and attachment service as provided by subsection (1)(c) of this section. [Formerly 90.910; 1997 c.577 ?6; 2001 c.596 ?29a]
This is done to save printing costs and to avoid mistakes by saying the same thing in several different places. However in these days of computers, one code rule can be written out in all locations (instead of a reference) and all these locations updated at the same time. (For a CD version or an online version.)
What I do with something like the above law, is to find the references, then copy and paste them into the appropriate place in the text, THEN I can read it and understand what it is saying.