Hu Shih[1][2][3][4] (Hanzi: 胡適; Pinyin: Hú Shì; Wade–Giles: Hu2 Shih4; 17 Desember 1891 – 24 Februari 1962), juga dikenal sebagai Hu Suh dalam rujukan-rujukan awal,[5][6] adalah seorang filsuf, esayis dan diplomat asal Tiongkok. Hu banyak dikenal saat ini sebagai kontributor utama untuk liberalisme dan reformasi bahasa Tionghoa dalam dukungannya terhadap pemakaian penulisan Tionghoa. Ia mempengaruhi Gerakan Empat Mei, salah satu pemimpin Gerakan Budaya Baru Tiongkok, presiden Universitas Peking dan dinominasikan untuk Nobel kesusastraan pada 1939.[7]
^"Department of State bulletin". 10 June 1944. hlm. 537. The representative of the National University of Peking is Dr. Chen-sheng Yang, who has been acting dean of the College of Arts and Literature in the absence of Dr. Hu Shih.1{...}1Chinese Ambassador to the United States, 1938-42.
^"Introduction". Diakses tanggal 27 June 2019. The Hu Shih Memorial Hall located on the Nankang campus was the residence where Dr. Hu Shih (1891-1962) lived from 1958 to 1962, during his tenure as the president of Academia Sinica. It consists of three parts: (1) Dr. Hu Shih’s residence; (2) the exhibition room, including Dr. Hu Shih’s works, photos, and etc; (3) Dr. Hu Shih’s graveyard near the Academia Sinica campus.
^H. G. W. Woodhead (ed.). The China Year Book 1921-2. Tientsin Press, Ltd. hlm. 905. HU SHIH, (Hu Suh).-(胡適)-Anhui. Born Dec. 17, 1891.{...}
^The Youth Movement In China. 1927. hlm. xii. I am also indebted to many friends in China, especially to Dr. Hu Suh of the National University of Peking{...}
Hu, Shih (2016). 四十自述(汉英对照)Autobiography at Forty. 博雅双语名家名作系列. Diterjemahkan oleh George Kao 乔志高 (edisi ke-Chinese-English bilingual). 北京 Beijing: 外语教学与研究出版社 Foreign Language Teaching and Research Press. hlm. 184. ISBN978-7-5135-7429-7. Diarsipkan dari versi asli tanggal 2020-08-01. Diakses tanggal 2020-08-14.
de Bary, W.M Theodore; Richard Lufrano (2000). Sources of Chinese Tradition, Volume Two (edisi ke-2nd). New York Chichester, West Sussex: Columbia University Press. hlm. 636.
"The Chinese Renaissance": a series of lectures Hu Shih delivered at the University of Chicago in the summer of 1933. (see print Reference listed above)