The {{Linktext}} template creates inline links to Wiktionary by default for each word separately to a page that matches that word, within the supplied text. Other wikis can be specified and thus interlanguage Wikipedias or interwiki links can be created.
Interlanguage links in general are links from a page in one Wikipedia in one language to a page in another Wikipedia in another language.
Usage
pref
The default target that this template links to is Wiktionary. To change the target, set the parameter |pref= to another sister wiki’s code (see list of sister wikis and their codes and list of Wikipedias and codes). For example, |pref=c for Commons, or |pref=th for Thai Wikipedia. To link to a foreign language Wiktionary, set to wikt:de or whatever {{lang}} code.
n1, n2, n3, etc.
Use the arguments |n1, |n2, |n3, up to |n20, to specify words that should not be linked. Regular spaces will be removed from the beginning and end of these; if you must have spaces, use   instead.
If you want to have a delimiter, such as ", ", appear between links, specify the delimiter with |lim=.
Note: Do not add this template everywhere. For some reason, this template is frequently used in articles containing CJK terms, but this is not recommended. Use this template only when a link to Wiktionary is really needed.
A disambiguation hatnote type. Useful if the article title is a generic name, but the content differs from it. For example, Squander is an article about a game, and this template is used to link to "squander" page in Wiktionary.
Turns each of consecutive words into an Wiktionary link, or any other interwiki / interlang link. Example: {{linktext|táłtłʼááh|adijiłii}}→táłtłʼááh adijiłii
Applies a language tag to a word, and links to that language's section of the Wiktionary entry on the word, much like the {{m}} and {{l}} templates on Wiktionary. For instance, {{wikt-lang|en|be|was}} yields was, and is equivalent to {{lang|en|[[wikt:be#English|was]]}}.