The other answers here look like the ticket (at least for what I wanted), so I'll provide an answer as to WHY you might want to do something like this (and perhaps there's a better answer for my case than what's been provided):
I came across this question looking for a way to build 3 very similar, but not identical buttons using Bootstrap. One button might look like
<div class="btn-group">
<a class="btn btn-primary dropdown-toggle" data-toggle="dropdown" href="#">
Modality
<span class="caret"></span>
</a>
<ul class="dropdown-menu" id="Modality">
<li><a href="#">Action</a></li>
</ul>
</div>
where the difference between buttons is limited to the text of the button (Modality, on its own line above) and the contents of the pertaining to the button, which we'll assume is filled dynamically by JS (referencing id="Modality").
If I need to make 10 of these, copy/pasting the HTML seems dumb and tedious, especially if I want to change anything about my button after the fact (like making all of them split-drop-downs) and it goes against DRY.
So, instead, in the template I could do something like
{% with 'Modality Otherbutton Thirdbutton' as list %}
{% for i in list.split %}
<!-- copy/paste above code with Modality replaced by {{ i }} -->
{% endfor %}
{% endwith %}
Now, granted, in this particular case the buttons add functionality to some related data grid, so the button names could be dynamically filled from django model-sourced data as well, but I'm not at that stage in my design right now, and you can see where this sort of functionality is desirable to maintain DRY.