<p>So say there was an sat writing question and you have to choose the most correct sentence. there were two answer choices.
1)After dinner, I went to bed.
2)I went to bed after dinner.</p>
<p>Is there an answer choice that's more correct?</p>
<p>So say there was an sat writing question and you have to choose the most correct sentence. there were two answer choices.
1)After dinner, I went to bed.
2)I went to bed after dinner.</p>
<p>Is there an answer choice that's more correct?</p>
<p>They’re both grammatically correct so you can’t choose one as being “more correct” over the other.</p>
<p>Both are correct, but I have seen questions just like this. When I was taking a test, I selected the first one, but got it wrong. The answer was the second one. I guess because it is the most concise and to the point (second one has no commas… less complicating). And this was on an official test.</p>
<p>I am sure there was an error in the answer choice you picked, but Diego timing constraints you might have overlooked the minute problem.</p>
<p>The Diego should be “due to”…Stupid Autocorrect.</p>
<p>Well there may be a typo in your transcription of the two choices. But if there isn’t, the comma in the first choice is clearly wrong. Think of it as a forced interruption. No comma is needed.</p>