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That's when you get Flo from Progressive.
Zombie Spider-Wolf
That would be scary
The zombie carries a virus. Therefore the werewolf will be corrupted by the virus due to mouth contact during the bite. It will turn into a zombie-werewolf that looks like this[i.imgur.com].
From a story writer's perspective, zombies should create that dead and decay feel, hence no reason for the zombie to change into a fast and furious werewolf. The werewolf however can become a new creature with the zombie virus, probably an undead blood covered fast creature to make a shocking entrance.
Werewolf will become undead if rotten flesh is still its system after it becomes a human again. After that they no longer transform into a werewolf, because they are dead. I don’t think it would become a zombie while being in wolf form and if its permanently a werewolf then i guess nothing happens to it.
Zombie:
George Romero's zombie is the Ur-zombie for me and therefore the truest form. Romero's zombie is slow and lumbering and can only be killed by destroying its brain. You might think that decapitation would be 100% successful but as we learn in Romero's Day of the Dead, zombies continue to display motor function even after they've been mutilated or sliced up. A zombie head might pose no threat, but if you're going to be absolutely sure that it cannot get back up remember Zombieland's Rules of Engagement: Always Double Tap.
You must always remember that no one knows the reason for zombies. There are many theories -- blood infection or virus (28 Days Later), curse (White Zombie), voodoo (Serpent and the Rainbow), and even some religious theories too: "When there is no more room in hell, the dead will walk the earth!" (Dawn of the Dead). Whatever the reason, there are no single zombies. Zombies are a horde or crowd event. By the time you encounter one there are already dozens or hundreds.
The zombie's raison d'être is to eat. They will eat even though they have no stomach. They are driven by hunger. A zombie doesn't gain nourishment from their 'meal,' their eating is simple raw instinct. They also have a memory of their past. This depends of how 'fresh' a zombie they are, as they are technically a 'walking corpse' and their brain (where memory is stored) will eventually decompose giving way to nothing but ceaseless hunger.
Werewolf:
The classic fable of becoming. Like zombies, lycanthropes have unknown origins but I consider An American Werewolf in London the classic Ur-werewolf. Werewolves are humans who for different reasons (infection, curse) transform into wolf-beasts by dint of the full moon. Lunar lunacy is a common theme in Werewolf lore as the full moon is often a catalyst for transformation.
There are different forms of werewolves: playful (Teen Wolf), beastly (American Werewolf in London), ghastly (The Howling). A werewolf is more animal than human, often experiencing augmented strength, speed and a near invulnerability. The transformation is temporary for unknown reasons.
A human becomes a werewolf by being bitten by one and by surviving the attack. Usually, a werewolf is out to kill not to turn other humans into werewolves. This is probably why it can be seen as a curse more so than a simple infection since surviving the attack is just as important as getting bit.
The Double Bite:
A werewolf doesn't just bite, it tears, rends, and slashes you to pieces. It is an attack. Presumably, because of its human-side, a werewolf doesn't attack for food. I can't see a werewolf simply biting a zombie and moving on its way. It would tear the zombie to pieces or simply look for live flesh. It doesn't seem to me that a werewolf would have much interest in a zombie's rotting flesh.
Zombies don't attack animals. Dogs are safe from zombies (Dawn of the Dead) as zombies only go for human flesh or in some cases human brains. Since a werewolf is more wolf (read: canine/animal) than human, I cannot see a zombie going for werewolf meat.
Yet in the rare case that a double bite might occur, a zombie's dead flesh will fail to hold the werewolf's curse and the full moon will not activate any mental states in a zombie's rotting brain. Though if a zombie were to bite a werewolf, the werewolf would indeed turn into a zombie. The gestation period for zombiefication is usually 3-4 days (Dawn of the Dead) so it would be the human-aspect of the lycanthrope that will turn. And since zombiefication nullfies the curse of lycanthropy, the werewolf would be cured.
The common point between the two monstrosities is that their bite is the vector of change: a zombie's bite, a werewolf's bite. Though whether one turns into the other differs based on their physiology. A zombie's body cannot hold the werewolf's curse, and only the human aspect of a werewolf can hold the zombie's. Note that a change will occur only through the bite of the other, as it is their bites that contaminate. Blood splatter or accidental ingestion of blood will not turn a human into a zombie (Day of the Dead). Likewise, 'swapping saliva' with a lycanthrope will not make one a werewolf (American Werewolf in London, Teen Wolf).
Interesting take.
Zombie bites werewolf = werewolf turns into a werezombiewolf, zombie is happy he has a pet.