Reconstructions

PWS
*ṣ̂pr - to plait (Kogan 2015: 98)
PWS
*ṣ̂Vpˁ- - dung (SED I No. 273; Kogan 2011: 227)
PWS
*ṣ̂VpardVˁ- - frog (SED II No. 222; Kogan 2011: 210)
It is only the Hbr. form that reflects the original quinqueconsonantal base, reduced to *ṣ̂VrdVˁ- in Aramaic and *ṣ̂VpdVˁ- in Arabic and MSA. Alternatively, two unrelated quadriconsonantal terms can be postulated for PS with their subsequent contamination in Hebrew.
PWS
*taḥt- - under (HALOT 1721‒1722, CDG 573, Arakelova 2001:43, Kogan 2015:384)
No convincing internal etymological reconstruction suggests itself, although the similarity between *taḥta and the Proto-Aramaic root *nḥt ‘to go down’ is noteworthy. It is usually assumed that this preposition is derived from the noun ‘lower part, what is beneath’ (DNWSI 1210, CDG 573), which is not unquestionable: at least, the distribution of the preposition over languages is much broader than that of the noun (Arakelova 2001:44).
PWS
*tVlm- - furrow (Kogan 2015: 123)
PWS
*tlw - to follow (Kogan 2015: 221 note 663)
PWS
*tVnVn- - a myhical snake (dragon) (SED II No. 227; Kogan 2011: 211)
PWS
*tpp - to spit (SED I No. 72ᵥ)
Rather a biconsonantal stem with various ways of triconsonantization (*tpp, *twp and *tpˀ), Cf. *twb, *tbb ‘to spit, vomit’ (SED I No. 74ᵥ).
PWS
*trp - to remain, to be left (CDG 579)
PWS
*ṭVb- - teat, breast (SED I No. 277, Kogan 2015: 458)