
A German woodcut of a Werewolf from 1722
- Waldgeist (German) – Forest spirit
 - Wana-games-ak (Abenaki) – Water spirits
 - Wani (Japanese) – Crocodilian water monster
 - Wanyūdō (Japanese) – Demon in the form of a burning human-headed ox cart
 - Warak ngendog (Indonesian Muslim) – Egg-laying bird
 - Warg (English and Scandinavian O.N. vargr) – Giant, demonic wolf
 - Warlock (Worldwide) – Male witch
 - Wassan-mon-ganeehla-ak (Abenaki) – Aurora spirits
 - Water monkey (Chinese) – Water spirit
 - Water sprite (Alchemy) – Water elemental
 - Wati-kutjara (Australia Aboriginal) – Goanna spirits
 - Wa-won-dee-a-megw (Abenaki) – Shapeshifting snail spirit
 - Weiße Frauen (German) – Female spirit
 - Wekufe (Mapuche) – Demon
 - Wendigo (Algonquian) – Anthropophagous spirit
 - Wentshukumishiteu (Inuit) – Water spirit
 - Werecat (Worldwide) – Feline-human shapeshifter
 - Werehyena (Africa) – Hyena-human shapeshifter
 - Werewolf (Worldwide) – Wolf-human shapeshifter
 - White Lady (Worldwide) – Ghost of a murdered or mistreated woman
 - Whowie (Australian Aboriginal) – Giant frog-headed goanna with six legs
 - Wild man (European) – Hairy, bipedal, man-like creature
 - Will-o'-the-Wisp (Worldwide) – Spectral fire
 - Winged genie (Assyrian) – Bearded male figures sporting birds
 - Wirry-cow (Scottish) – Malevolent spirit
 - Witch (Worldwide) – Person who practices magic
 - Witte Wieven (Dutch) – Female, ancestral spirit
 - Wolpertinger (German) – Forest animal comprised from various animal parts (similar to a Chimera)
 - Wondjina (Australia Aboriginal) – Weather spirit
 - Wraith (Scottish) – Water spirit or ghostly apparition
 - Wulver (Scottish) – Wolf-headed humanoid spirit
 - Wu Tou Gui (Chinese) – Beheaded ghost
 - Wyrm – English dragon
 - Wyvern (Germanic Heraldic) – Flying reptile, usually with two legs and two wings
 
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