a small building for Christian worship, typically one attached to an institution or private house
a town in north central North Carolina, home to the University of North Carolina as well as many research facilities; population 52,542 (est. 2008)
a chapel in the Vatican, built in the late 15th century by Pope Sixtus IV, containing a painted ceiling and fresco of the Last Judgment by Michelangelo and also frescoes by Botticelli
a chapel situated for the convenience of parishioners living a long distance from the parish church
the body of clergy, singers, and musicians employed by the English monarch for religious services, now based at St James’s Palace, London
an establishment where the dead are prepared for burial or cremation