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The reconstruction of the root-final stop faces some contention with most older sources preferring the labiovelar *kʷ,[1][2] while other sources question[3][4] or outright reject the labiovelar[5][6] in favor of the plain velar *k.
The evidence in favor of the labiovelar consists primarily of the Hittite𒉿𒀜𒆪𒍖𒍣(wa-at-ku-uz-zi/watkuzi/, “to jump (out of), to flee”), which must come from an athematic stem ending in *kʷ and which may come from a univerbation of *wé-tkʷ-ti. Kloekhorst mentions, however, that this could also be a root *wetkʷ- comparable to stems such as *h₂edʰǵʰ- or *tetḱ-.[7]
Also, there is the proposal that Proto-Germanic*þewaz(“servant”) came from earlier *þehwaz from *tekʷós. While Kroonen prefers the Germanic-only root *tew-,[4] the EIEC ascribe this and other such forms as *-w- extensions of the root.[5] If the Sanskritतकु(táku, “running along”) represents a *-u- stem adjective *tékʷ-u-s ~ *tkʷ-éw-s, this could explain the appearance of this extension.
In favor of the plain velar is the Tocharian Bcake(“river”) from Proto-Tocharian*cäke, which Adams derived from *ték-es- or *ték-ont- meaning “that which flows.”[6]
Ambiguously, the general absence of Proto-Brythonic*-b- in the descendants of Proto-Celtic*tek(ʷ)eti (Middle Bretontechet, Cornishtêgh, Middle Welshtechu) points to the velar being plain. Matasović, however, gives the explanation that the Brythonic *-x- was derived from the Celtic *-s- subjunctive: *tekʷs- > Brythonic *tex-, and that the labiovelar does surface in the form Old Welshny-debit(imperfect impersonal relative) found in Aneirin.[8]
↑ 6.06.16.2Adams, Douglas Q. (2013) “cake”, in A Dictionary of Tocharian B: Revised and Greatly Enlarged (Leiden Studies in Indo-European; 10), Amsterdam, New York: Rodopi, →ISBN, page 267
↑ 7.07.1Kloekhorst, Alwin (2008) “u̯atku-ᶻⁱ”, in Etymological Dictionary of the Hittite Inherited Lexicon (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 5), Leiden, Boston: Brill, →ISBN, pages 989-990