I think it might be a breadboard. Maybe like this one?
If so, the ground isn't ground until you make a connection to ground. You (
@thuc) get to decide what is ground.
If you tilt the breadboard up so that the long dimension is vertical and the shorter dimension is horizontal, then in the middle of the board (adjacent to the large, central, vertical indentation), then there is a large array of x5 internal connections, one row on each side of the large indentation. That means that you can put a dual inline package (DIP) integrated circuit (IC) vertically along the center indentation, and you have 4 leftover squares for each pin for connections. On this area of the breadboard, the rows have internal connections bounded by the indentations.
On the vertical edges, the internal connections are along the columns (on the outside of the two, smaller, vertical indentations), not the rows. Each edge has internal connections that go along the
entire column*. There are two, separate columns on the left side and another two, separate columns on the right side. Usually, you'll choose one column to be ground (GND) and another to be the positive voltage (V_{CC} or V_{DD}). But this is your choice.
*[Edit: on some breadboards, the internal connections only go down half-way along the columns. You can check this on your breadboard by looking at your breadboard's documentation, or by performing a continuity test.]
No connection is ground until you hook it up to the power supply and connect it so that it is ground.