"Middle English chapele, from Old French, from Medieval Latin capella, chapel, canopy, cape (perhaps from a shrine containing the cape of St. Martin of Tours), diminutive of capa, from Late Latin cappa, hooded cloak."
Taken from Answers.com
Other words include shrine, chantry, or bethel (seafarer chapel).
dungens
No, because it is not a proper nou n.
The cave was used as a chapel by the locals who are largely Catholic.
The correct spelling of the common word is chapel (a church or shrine).(A proper noun is the surname Chapelle.)
"Chaplaincy" is a word that refers to someone who is in the position of being a chaplain. A chaplain is a member of a clergy attached to a private chapel.
The Sistine Chapel Chapel is not a genre. It's a building.
In the Sistine Chapel, Vatican City in Rome, Italy.The Sistine Chapel was the name of the chapel in which Michelangelo painted a picture upon the ceiling.
A chapel is like a church.
The Sistine Chapel.
The Sistine Chapel
The Sistine Chapel in Rome is decorated with frescoes by Michelangelo.