Count: 0 — No angel names that start with W meet the criteria. Searches of canonical sources and reputable angelology references return no authenticated angelic names beginning with the letter W. Note that angel names overwhelmingly come from Hebrew, Greek, and Arabic roots and often end in -el or -iah, which makes a W initial unusually rare among traditional lists.

Understand that linguistic and historical factors explain the absence. Traditional angel names derive from Semitic roots and classical languages that do not commonly produce an initial W sound when transliterated into English. Transliteration conventions also favor V, U, or vowel initials for the Semitic letter vav, so names that might sound like they begin with W in other contexts do not appear that way in authoritative lists such as the Hebrew Bible, the Book of Enoch, Islamic tradition, or established angelology dictionaries.

Expect only modern inventions or fictional names to appear under “angel names that start with W.” Some baby-name sites and fantasy works coin W-initial, angel-like names by adding the -el suffix, but these are not found in religious texts and should be treated as creative fabrications or disputed entries. Consult canonical sources (Bible, Book of Enoch, Quran, and standard angelology references like Davidson’s Dictionary of Angels) and consider related searches — names that start with U or V, names containing -el, or names meaning “messenger,” “light,” or “divine” — to find authoritative angelic names and their meanings.