Language of the Werewolves. Werewolves are able to speak wolfish (the language by which wolves communicate) and mannish according to what they were raised with. In the height of Werewolf culture, all werewolves spoke wolfish, mannish and a third unique language that was the tongue of werewolves. It is mostly a spoken (out loud) tongue but also incorporates some of the body gestures of wolfish. It is speakable in any form between wolf and man. Outside hearers of this language describe it as a guttural growling and snarling that still resembles a language of man in some ways. (Having a pattern recognizable to the human ear as "speech.") Lately, however, most werewolves speak mannish or wolfish according to the shape they keep most often, and have lost the werewolf language entirely
However, in many fictional depictions of werewolves, it is assumed that they can speak just as humans do. They are part-human, part-wolf, after all. See Fenrir Greyback in the Harry Potter books.
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Telepathy & body language
Language of the Werewolves. Werewolves are able to speak wolfish (the language by which wolves communicate) and mannish according to what they were raised with. In the height of Werewolf culture, all werewolves spoke wolfish, mannish and a third unique language that was the tongue of werewolves. It is mostly a spoken (out loud) tongue but also incorporates some of the body gestures of wolfish. It is speakable in any form between wolf and man. Outside hearers of this language describe it as a guttural growling and snarling that still resembles a language of man in some ways. (Having a pattern recognizable to the human ear as "speech.") Lately, however, most werewolves speak mannish or wolfish according to the shape they keep most often, and have lost the werewolf language entirely
They don't, because they don't exist.
However, in many fictional depictions of werewolves, it is assumed that they can speak just as humans do. They are part-human, part-wolf, after all. See Fenrir Greyback in the Harry Potter books.
That depends of the fiction book you are reading.
Obviously by rubbing a fork against oak tree roots.
As they don't exist, except for in fiction, they can communicate in any way the author chooses.
They could use Facebook, Morse Code or the telephone - any way at all.
Smell, scent, growling
They howl
werewolves communicate in the same manner that ordinary wolfs do...............................
twitter...get with the times.