nancylebov: (green leaves)
nancylebov ([personal profile] nancylebov) wrote2011-05-17 03:38 pm

General words for religious buildings?

As far as I know, English doesn't have general words for religious buildings-- it's synagogue, church, mosque, and it will annoy or confuse people if you interchange them.

Temple or shul might substitute for synagogue (there's cultural variation on that one, of course), and Hindu temple is the only catchphrase I've got for any other religion.

Are there languages which do have general words for religious buildings? Is it a sign of being calmer on the subject if a culture has such words? Is there a legal term in English for religious buildings?

ETA: The idea I was trying to get was that if there were a common word or phrase that people used to refer to houses of worship, including the one they go to, it might indicate that they thought of all religions as being the same sort of thing.

For example, you might refer to your local supermarket by its trademark but there'd be nothing odd about saying that you're going to a supermarket, because there's no strong group loyalty which leads you to think that your preferred supermarket is qualitatively different from other sorts of supermarket.

[identity profile] womzilla.livejournal.com 2011-05-19 01:28 am (UTC)(link)
Huh. In my version of English, a chapel is a Christian place of worship within (or at least in association with) another institution--e.g., a chapel within a hospital. Duke University's church, which is quite sizable ("the world's only Methodist cathedral", I've heard it called) is "Duke Chapel".

[identity profile] subnumine.livejournal.com 2011-05-19 03:56 am (UTC)(link)
Both of you are ringing changes on the original sense of chapel: a Christian place of worship which isn't the (officially sanctioned) parish church or cathedral.

Papersky is also experiencing time travel: in 1776, the Methodists were a variety of Anglican, so they had churches. So they still do - in the United States.

[identity profile] nancylebov.livejournal.com 2011-05-19 10:09 am (UTC)(link)
If I remember correctly, a relatively small room set up for worship in the synagogue I went to when I was a kid (Beth Shalom in Wilmington, DE) was referred to as a chapel.

If the main room for worship (the one with the Torah scrolls and the eternal light) had a name, I don't remember it.

Now that I think about it, I can't swear that the smaller room didn't have an eternal light and a cabinet for Torah scrolls.

I think the chapel was used for overflow on the High Holy Days-- I assume most religions have peak load problems.

I have faint memories of it being used for something else in Hebrew school (not classes) but I can't quite remember what.
Edited 2011-05-19 10:14 (UTC)