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From Proto-Indo-European*gʷerH-(“to praise”), suffixed with either *-tis, *-ts, or both as separate formations. A related formation with the past passive participle suffix also exists in Italic as *gʷrātos.
Two conflicting forms make connecting Latin grātēs and its Sabellic relatives difficult:
Latin grātēs has genitive grātium, indicative of an i-stem declension. But Rix contends that consonant-stem inflection was ancestral to the Latin forms, due to the lack of evidence that an accusative grātīs ever existed.
Sabellic consistently attests -om in the accusative singular, implying consonant-stem or o-stem inflection.
How to resolve this discrepancy varies wildly by source.[1]
Untermann and Rix prefer reconstructing original *gʷrāts.
Many others prefer original *gʷrātis.
De Vaan reconstructs separate formations: an i-stem for Latin, and a consonant-stem for Sabellic.[2]
Descendants
Latin: grātēspl (see there for further descendants)
^ Untermann, Jürgen (2000) “O.p.vs. brateis”, in Wörterbuch des Oskisch-Umbrischen [Dictionary of Oscan-Umbrian] (Handbuch der italischen Dialekte; 3), Heidelberg: Winter, →ISBN, pages 149-151
^ De Vaan, Michiel (2008) “grātus”, in Etymological Dictionary of Latin and the other Italic Languages (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 7), Leiden, Boston: Brill, →ISBN, page 271