In British English it would be magaZINE but I think Americans pronounce it more like MAGazine. In each case the middle syllable is weak (schwa) but the syllable that doesn't have the primary stress has a secondary stress so it is not weakened. So even in British English the 'mag' part of magaZINE rhymes with 'tag'.
The word is pronounced suh-KYOOR-uh- tee. Accent on the second syllable.
The accent is on the first syllable.
lib-rary
library
The primary stress is on the first syllable. RAY-dee-oh. When trying to locate the primary stress, the easiest way is to hum the word. When you hum it, the syllable with primary stress will come out louder. Secondary stress will be second loudest, etc.
equal stress
3rd a
The syllables are en-thu-si-as-tic. The primary emphasis rests on "thu" and the secondary stress on "as."
The third syllable.
The primary stress in the word "cabinets" is on the second syllable, "bi".
primary stress of camera
The primary stress of the word absence is on the first syllable, ab.
The primary stress is on the first syllable. RAY-dee-oh. When trying to locate the primary stress, the easiest way is to hum the word. When you hum it, the syllable with primary stress will come out louder. Secondary stress will be second loudest, etc.
equal stress
The primary stress in the word "contrast" is on the second syllable, "trast".
I
A
3rd a
The stress is on the first syllable -- PRI - ma - ry
Primary stress is where the word has its biggest concentration of sound. It is marked by an apostrophe placed at the beginning of the stressed syllable, and the apostrophe MUST be up-placed. Secondary stress is where the word has any sort of stress, yet it is not as relevant as the primary stress; the apostrophe is placed in the beginning of the stress syllable, but it MUST be down-placed. For example: in the word vaccination, it should be like this: [ˌvæk-sǝ-'nei-ʃǝn]. Where the "va" has the secondary stress, and the "na" has the primary stress.
The third.