Zhū Shì 朱軾 (1664–1736), zì Ruòzhān 若瞻 (and zì Bǐnyǐ 賓予), hào Kětíng 可亭, posthumous title Wénduān 文端, was a high KāngxīYōngzhèngQiánlóng court official, Lǐxué scholar, and Grand Secretary, from Gāo’ān 高安 (Ruìzhōu 瑞州, modern Jiāngxī 江西). He passed the jìnshì in Kāngxī jiǎxū 康熙甲戌 = 1694 and rose to Grand Secretary of the Hall of Literary Glory (Wénhuá diàn dàxuéshì 文華殿大學士) and Senior Tutor of the Heir Apparent. He served as one of the principal Yōngzhèng-period court ministers and was the personal tutor of the future Qiánlóng emperor in his youth.

Zhū’s classical scholarship focused principally on the Yílǐ 儀禮 and Xiǎo Dài lǐjì 小戴禮記, but he also wrote on the , Chūnqiū, and Zhōuguān. His Zhōuyì zhuàn yì hé dìng 周易傳義合訂 (KR1a0142) in twelve juàn was published posthumously by his former subordinate Émídá 鄂彌達 (then Governor-General of the Two Guǎng); the Qiánlóng emperor personally composed the imperial preface (Qiánlóng 2 = 1737) acknowledging Zhū as his own classical-learning tutor and praising the work as exemplary. The work is methodologically distinctive within the YōngzhèngQiánlóng court Yìxué: it adopts a position closer to the kǎozhèng-school revivalists (Máo Qílíng’s fǎn yì and duì yì are accepted; cuò zōng of Lái Zhīdé is rejected) than to the standard Lǐ Guāngdì line.