Li Rong was born in Wenling county, Zhejiang.
In 1939 he was admitted to the Southwest Associated University in Kunming, studying Chinese literature.
In 1943, he went on to postgraduate study at the Language Institute of Peking University, then based in Kunming.
His master's thesis, a study of the system of fanqie pronunciation guides in the Qieyun, a 7th-century rime dictionary, was published in 1952.[2]
In this work, he demonstrated that the mysterious "divisions" of the later rime tables reflected distributional patterns in the Qieyun.[3]
^ abcde"Lǐ Róng xiānshēng jiǎnlì" 李荣先生简历 [Li Rong: biographical sketch] (in Chinese). Institute of Linguistics, The Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2015-04-19, adapted from obituary in Fangyan 2003(2):97–107.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
^Branner, David Prager (2006). "What are rime tables and what do they mean?". In Branner, David Prager (ed.). The Chinese Rime Tables: Linguistic Philosophy and Historical-Comparative Phonology. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. pp. 1–34. ISBN978-90-272-4785-8.
^Kurpaska, Maria (2010). Chinese Language(s): A Look Through the Prism of "The Great Dictionary of Modern Chinese Dialects". Walter de Gruyter. pp. 55–56. ISBN978-3-11-021914-2.
^Yan, Margaret Mian (2006). Introduction to Chinese Dialectology. LINCOM Europa. pp. 60–61. ISBN978-3-89586-629-6.