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Quickly generate English articles that look well-structured but are completely nonsensical. Ideal for placeholder text in web design, presentations, and other layout scenarios.
Enter a topic or keywords in English. Generated content is for creative, placeholder, and entertainment purposes only.
Generate 100–2,000 words. The final count may vary slightly to preserve complete paragraphs.
Enter a topic to generate an English article that sounds rigorous while saying remarkably little.
Whether you're designing a website, putting together a presentation, or testing a print layout, you often need a block of English text just to fill the space and see how fonts, line spacing, and image wrapping behave. Designers traditionally use “Lorem ipsum,” a meaningless Latin placeholder. Our generator turns that placeholder into something that looks like a real article — but the content is still pure nonsense. Every paragraph it generates is grammatically borderline acceptable; words seem to relate to each other, but once you read them as a whole, you realize it's just a random string of sentences with zero actual information.
With this generator, you simply enter a topic word (or leave it blank), set the desired word count, and click a button. You'll get a neatly formatted English article of exactly the right length. It won't write your essay or news report, but it will quickly fill out your layout.
Behind the scenes, the tool relies on a large English lexicon containing thousands of nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, and common phrase templates (like “is a major driving force” or “has been widely used in”). Each time you generate, the program randomly picks words from this pool and stitches them together using simple English sentence patterns — for example, “subject + verb + object + modifier.” If you provide a topic word, the program favors vocabulary related to that topic, making the article appear to revolve around it.
Some more advanced implementations use Markov chains trained on large English corpora to learn transition probabilities between words, producing even smoother yet still meaningless sentences. But no matter the method, the core logic is always “grammatically compliant, semantically random.” That's why the article you get might read like a tech review, a business analysis, or even a philosophical essay — but the sentences have no logical connection to each other. That's the essence of “nonsense.”
Open the generator, and you'll see the main input areas:
We set the topic to “technology” and the length to 500 words, then clicked generate. Here's an excerpt (the actual article is longer; this is just the beginning):
Technology has been a major driving force in the field of modern society. The innovation of technological devices leads to a significant change in the way we perceive the world. However, the banana is not a fruit of technology but a source of potassium. Many researchers have discovered that technology can improve the efficiency of banana peeling. In conclusion, the future of technology is deeply connected with the way we eat fruits.
You can immediately tell that while each sentence seems grammatically correct on its own, when you read them together the topic jumps from “technology” to “bananas” and back again, making absolutely no sense. That's a classic “nonsense” article: it has a title, paragraphs, punctuation — all the right forms, just none of the meaning. For layout testing, this kind of text is more useful than pure Latin placeholder because it mimics the visual rhythm of a real English article.
If you change the topic word to love and set the length to 200 words, you might get a short, romantic-but-ridiculous passage:
Love is a beautiful feeling that can be found in the ocean. When two hearts meet, the ocean breeze brings a sense of happiness. However, the economic impact of love cannot be ignored. Studies show that love increases the consumption of chocolate and flowers. Therefore, love is not only an emotion but also a market force.
Now try leaving the topic word empty and setting the length to 1000 words. You'll get a completely unpredictable long article that might involve dinosaurs, stock markets, weather forecasts, and spaghetti — perfect for testing long-form layouts. Every result is different, and you can click as many times as you like until you find a placeholder text that looks “just right.”
All text produced by this generator contains no real information whatsoever. It must not be used for academic papers, news reports, business proposals, or any context where factual content is required. If you publish it as real content, you risk misleading readers and may even face legal consequences.
Also, because the vocabulary is randomly combined, occasionally inappropriate collocations or unintentionally sensitive words may appear. We strongly recommend that you read through any generated text before using it in a public setting and manually replace any unsuitable parts. The generator itself provides no content moderation.
The randomness of the algorithm also means that grammatical correctness is not guaranteed. You may encounter subject–verb disagreements, tense inconsistencies, and other errors. It only simulates the appearance of an English article, not its linguistic accuracy. Finally, never attempt to use this kind of text to deceive search engines — that's a “content farm” spam tactic and can result in your site being penalized or blacklisted.
Can I use the generated English article directly on my website?
It can be used as a placeholder to check layout, but don't publish it as real content. It contains no actual information, and visitors will get confused — or think your site is a joke.
Why does the generated article look real?
Because it uses real English words and common sentence patterns that follow English writing conventions. At first glance, there are no obvious spelling mistakes. But as soon as you try to understand the meaning, you'll notice the sentences don't connect logically — that's the inevitable result of random combination.
Can I specify the style or tone of the article?
At the moment, our generator mainly influences word choice through the topic word. You cannot control style, tone, or article structure. All output is randomly arranged; the style can be techy, academic, or completely absurd.
Will articles repeat?
Due to the word pool and the random seed mechanism, each generated article is very likely to be different. However, because the total vocabulary is finite, there is an extremely low theoretical chance of repetition. If you need many different placeholder texts, just click generate multiple times.
Is this tool free?
Yes, you can use it freely and generate as many articles as you want. But please keep the above cautions in mind and don't misuse it.
Why is it called “Nonsense English Article Generator”?
“Nonsense” perfectly captures the tool's essence: it produces articles that are formally correct but completely meaningless in content. The name reflects exactly what you get — something that looks like a real article but makes no sense when you actually read it.
Now go ahead and enter a topic, and see what kind of bewildering English article it comes up with.

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