What does "throw a spanner in the works" mean — and why is it funny?
informal, British
Meaning
To do something that suddenly disrupts a plan or stops it from working.
Where it comes from
A British phrase from the early 1900s — Americans say 'throw a wrench in the works'. A spanner dropped into machinery would jam and wreck it.
Why it is funny
The humor is the cartoon vandalism of it. A smooth-running plan is pictured as delicate machinery, and ruining it is as simple, and as satisfyingly destructive, as lobbing a tool into the gears.
Used in a sentence
"The sudden rain threw a spanner in the works for the outdoor wedding."