There are hardly any; "w" can almost be thought as not being part of the Spanish language, though it does appear in some foreign words, for example place names such as "Washington", personal names such as "Walter", as well as a few common words, all of which are adapted from other languages.
There aren't any.
There really arn't too many words that start with the letter 'w' in the Spanish language. This is because the 'W' is not a Spanish letter, but rather one that they adopted from the English language. The words that begin with a 'w' in Spanish are all nouns.
No Spanish words begin with W but some words borrowed from English, like 'walkman', 'water' (meaning 'toilet'), 'waterpolo' and 'whisky'.
xilófonoxenofobiaxenófoboyateyugoyugoslaviawhiski (nowadays, this spelling is accepted in Spanish)Other workds I can think in Spanish with a W are mainly names..
nothing
There are no Spanish words that begin with the letter W. There may be some words borrowed from foreign languages that do, but if so they are few. Many do not consider W to be a letter in the Spanish alphabet.
W is not a letter used in Spanish except for borrowed words.
Some Spanish words that have a "w" in them include "whisky," "kiwi," and "wáterpolo" (water polo). This letter is not common in Spanish vocabulary, as it's usually used in loanwords from other languages.
Yes the letter W is in the spanish alphabet... In my dictionary there are 11 words with the letter W, but most of them are words from foreign languages like the word: Windsurfista = Windsurfer
The letter W is not used in true Spanish words. Most English words that contain W are related to German. In a publication in Spanish, W will show in proper names like Washington, just as vowels with written accents might be used in English context in a place name like Chichén Itzá. But Chichén Itzá is not an English word, and Washington is not a Spanish word.
waterpolista wat (= English 'watt', is also rendered by 'vatio'. Similarly 'Wagnerian' and 'Westphalian' can be rendered by 'wagneriano' and 'westfaliano', but more correctly 'vagneriano' and 'vestfaliano')
Hardly any. "W" is hardly considered a Spanish letter; it is only used in foreign words.