Wú Jī 吳箕 (fl. 1169; CBDB id 35081), zì Sìzhī 嗣之, was a Southern Sòng bǐjì writer of Xīnān 新安 (Huīzhōu). Jìnshì of Qiándào 5 (1169); held office as Rénhé zhǔbù, Línchuān education-officer, and zhī Dāngtú xiàn. Held in high regard by Zhào Rǔyú 趙汝愚, who summoned him to the central commission of inquiry; died soon after of illness. Sòng shǐ has no biography; his career-record survives only in the Huīzhōu zhì. While at Línchuān he associated with Lù Jiǔyuān 陸九淵 (1139–1193) and is regarded as having received the Jīnxī (Lù) school’s yìlǐ transmission — though, as the Sìkù editors note, not in slavish form (he openly disagrees with Lù on Jí Àn). His longer work, the Tīng cí lèi gǎo 聽詞類稿 in 12 vols., is lost; the Cháng tán 常談 (KR3j0116) in 1 juàn — restored from the Yǒnglè dàdiǎn with about a hundred entries — survives. The Cháng tán is píng zhì (evaluative comment) on historical figures and events, with occasional kǎozhèng, and is one of the principal bǐjì witnesses to the Lù-school’s influence on a generation of literati.