I’ve just been recommended I begin adding wiki pages to a friend’s class project that involves creating a wiki that makes every single word on every single page (in the main text area) to be an internal link to that particular word. You can make up crazy phrases like “Steak is a great food for people who like steak,” and “Rusty transwarp manifolds is what got us into this mess, mister,” and begin each new wacky sentence starting with a word in your newly invented sentence that does not yet have a completed entry.
Basically you can just write out a sentence on each new entry page beginning with the original word of which the page belongs, and just add double brackets around every word in an effort to employ words that have not yet been used. For example: When editing the page for margarine, you could simply type [[Margarine]] [[is]] [[routinely]] [[outsmarted]][ [[by]] [[the]] [[obstacle]] [[course]] [[in]] [[Westminster]].
It is actually a rather good exercise in creative writing — to use newer words that could still communicate the same idea. Instead of ending every spoken remark with he said, it said, she said, they said, writers may more wisely opt for a less repetitious word to emphasize the intent of the statements being made, such as he retorted, it emoted, she rebuked, they demanded. Adding random adverbs (generally -ly words or those that clarify adjectives) like begrudgingly, empathically and disturbingly to regular adjectives can create even more absurdly peculiar sentences.

