| • | A subordinate place of worship |
| • | a small church, often a private foundation, as for a memorial |
| • | a small building attached to a church |
| • | a room or recess in a church, containing an altar. |
| • | A place of worship not connected with a church; as, the chapel of a palace, hospital, or prison. |
| • | In England, a place of worship used by dissenters from the Established Church; a meetinghouse. |
| • | A choir of singers, or an orchestra, attached to the court of a prince or nobleman. |
| • | A printing office, said to be so called because printing was first carried on in England in a chapel near Westminster Abbey. |
| • | An association of workmen in a printing office. |
| • | To deposit or inter in a chapel; to enshrine. |
| • | To cause (a ship taken aback in a light breeze) so to turn or make a circuit as to recover, without bracing the yards, the same tack on which she had been sailing. |