The framework itself does not provide a way to do this, but you can take a look at [this post][1] by Scott Hanselman. Example usage:
Person p = new Person();
string foo = p.ToString("{Money:C} {LastName}, {ScottName} {BirthDate}");
Assert.AreEqual("$3.43 Hanselman, {ScottName} 1/22/1974 12:00:00 AM", foo);
[This code][2] by James Newton-King is similar and works with sub-properties and indexes,
string foo = "Top result for {Name} was {Results[0].Name}".FormatWith(student));
James's code relies on *System.Web.UI.DataBinder* to parse the string and requires referencing System.Web, which some people don't like to do in non-web applications.
EDIT: Oh and they work nicely with anonymous types, if you don't have an object with properties ready for it:
string name = ...;
DateTime date = ...;
string foo = "{Name} - {Birthday}".FormatWith(new { Name = name, Birthday = date });
[1]: http://www.hanselman.com/blog/ASmarterOrPureEvilToStringWithExtensionMethods.aspx
[2]: http://james.newtonking.com/archive/2008/03/29/formatwith-2-0-string-formatting-with-named-variables.aspx