Electronic – getting shocked from “hot” line and touching “ground” (Earth)

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So I live in an EU country and don't have Earth grounding for my house. Still I am getting shocked when touching "hot" line (220VAC) and standing on "ground" (Earth). How is this possible?

From my understanding it needs to close a circuit to generate a current flow through my body. I heard of some sort of capacitance that can close the circuit, but didn't fully understand the concept. (It will close the circuit between "ground" and neutral through air ?? So current will flow through me, ground and neutral)

So to extend this idea, if getting a "hot" line somewhere far from civilization will cause a current to flow through me and then "ground", going back to the source.

Neutral line is not touched in any way. Just floating.

Best Answer

You are completing a circuit.

In most homes there is a connection between Earth/Ground and Neutral at or near the point where the electrical supply enters the building.

So the circuit is from the hot side of the supply to the "hot" line you are touching, through you, into the ground, along the ground, into the earthing conductors for the building, through the ground-neutral link into the neutral side of the supply.

enter image description here

See also 2nd diagram at shock current path