I live in Cambridge, England, and the land around here is FEN. In fact, if you drive north about 15 miles you enter FENLAND - a part of the county that is farmland drained by a series of ditches, canals and pumping stations. This fenland extends north through Lincolnshire, and east into Norfolk, and west into the midlands. The countryside is very flat, it's dry farmland between the drainage ditches. It's agriculturally very productive with two crops a year in many parts. The crops are varied - potatoes, cabbage, asparagus, celery, and ornamental bulbs and flowers. With so much water around there are a lot of birds, particularly swans and ducks.
In the west of England and the north, and in Wales and Scotland, you get MOORLAND. This often consists of hills covered in heather, gorse, and sheep, and deer. These upland areas get very boggy due to the rainfall and underlying impervious rock. Moorland can be rather flat, but it looks nothing like the low-lying fens with its drainage network and pumping stations. Much of Fenland is below sea-level and at risk of major flooding from the sea. Much moorland is well above sea-level and at no risk of flooding. They really are very different.
We have ground that is rather 'swampy' but in England we don't have large areas of swamp. And we don't have alligators cruising through them. We have the odd bog or two - which is a really swampy wet muddy area. They are small - some only a few yards across. You might find really dangerous bogs on the moors.
Marshland is a rather mixed bag of types. Any rather soggy areas we might call 'marsh.' Where the FENS are less well drained you get MARSH. Marsh is NOT useful for agriculture, but is perfect for wading and nesting birds.
So, around here there are very distinct types of land. Most is FEN. There are some MARSHES, particularly near the coast. We have no MOORS here - you need to go to the higher ground to find a real moor.
So, I hope that helps, and goodbye from me here in FENLAND.