n. A subordinate place of worship forming an addition to or a part of a large church or a cathedral, but separately dedicated, and devoted to special services.n. A separate building subsidiary to a parish church: as, a parochial chapel; a free chapel.n. A small independent church-edifice devoted to special services.n. A place of worship connected with a royal palace, a private house, or a corporation, as a university or college.n. In Scotland and Ireland, any Roman Catholic church or place of worship.n. An Anglican church, usually small, anywhere on the continent of Europe.n. A place of worship used by non-conformists in England; a meeting-house.n. In printing: A printing-house; a printersā workshop: said to be so designated because printing was first carried on in England, by Caxton, in a chapel attached to Westminster Abbey.n. The collective body of journeymen printers in a printing-house.n. A choir of singers or an orchestra attached to a nobleman's or ecclesiastic's establishment or a prince's court.To deposit or bury in a chapel; enshrine.Nautical, to turn (a ship) completely about in a light breeze of wind, when close-hauled, so that she will lie the same way as before.