This is a perpetual problem, unfortunately, and has been ever since the suggested edits system was invented.
The issue is, as has already been explained to you in the comments, that the reviewers felt your edit was too minor. In other words, they thought the edit was trivial and did not substantially improve the post. Therefore, they rejected it. That's a completely valid reason to reject an edit, but it is obviously a subjective one. Different reviewers will and do have different standards for what makes an edit "substantial".
Naturally, the next question is, why are trivial edits bad? The answer (again, as has already been revealed in the comments) is two-fold:
You are awarded reputation points when your suggested edit is approved, so submitting a rash of excessively trivial edits is a form of reputation farming and widely considered to be a relatively inappropriate (if not downright abusive) way of gaining reputation (and therefore, most importantly, privileges on the site).
Suggested edits have to be reviewed and approved by at least two other trusted users. The idea is, this is a reasonable use of their time as long as the edits are substantially improving the site for everyone. However, if the edits are trivial, this is wasting the time of those two reviewers, who could have been spending that time doing other things to improve the site (posting answers, making edits of their own, etc.).
Your edit was not wrong, and it's easy to imagine that had two different people reviewed it, it would have been approved. At the same time, the rejection was valid—I can certainly see how someone would consider this too trivial (and I'm quite a stickler about grammar). Hopefully you can now understand their perspective, too.
What can you do about this going forward? You really only have three options:
Only submit edits where you are making substantial revisions to the post. In other words, only make edits that are obviously non-trivial.
If you want to make what would otherwise be a trivial edit like this one, go through the rest of the post with a fine-toothed comb and fix any other trivial problems that might be there. In this case, there are a couple of commas omitted and a couple of phrases (like "Stores local data, return addresses, used for parameter passing") that don't make sense and should be rewritten.
The idea here is, by making a large number of trivial edits, the entire edit is no longer trivial.
Note, though, that this only works well for those with exceptional English skills. If you're not a native speaker, or struggled in English grammar courses, you will probably just end up doing more harm than good if you try to do this. Best to leave it for someone else to handle.
Insist that your edit was reasonable (as I said above, you do have a leg to stand on) and keep suggesting edits like this one, taking your chances with the reviewers. Some of them will get approved; some of them will get rejected. I'm not too sure what your odds are of approval vs. rejection, and this is risky because too many rejected edits will temporarily ban you from making additional suggestions.