Cittadino is the Italian equivalent of 'citizen'. It's a masculine gender noun whose feminine equivalent for a female citizen is 'cittadina'. The word for 'citizenship', for men and women, is the feminine gender noun 'cittadinanza'.
What are the duties of an Italian citizen?
In order to get an Italian passport you need to be an Italian citizen. The same applies to any country's passports. That is the purpose of a passport, it is a proof of citizen. So the question is really: are you an Italian citizen? Or can you get Italian citizenship (naturalisation or because one of your parents was Italian).
i am a us citizen and left italy at age 15 in 1961 am i still an italian citixen ?
You should be be a Italian born citizen , to play for Italy.
You must be an Italian born citizen
Become an Italian Citizen, go to the government agenty that distributes them
No. Mussolini was an Italian.
If you are an Italian citizen (Cittadinanza Italiana) residing in the UK, you can apply at the Italian embassy in London.
I'm unsure what you mean by "registered" in Italy. If you were born in Italy naturally you would certainly be a citizen. If you were born out side of Italy you could apply for Italian citizenship. If I had to guess I would say you are probably not a citizen of Italy right now, but it should be fairly simple (assuming you are currently living in a country that allows dual citizenship, like the USA) to become an Italian citizen. You could contact your nearest Italian consulate to find out if you are a citizen (explain your situation) or to become a citizen. From my understanding since both of your parents were citizens you would be able to become a citizen (as long as you had one great-grandfather who was a citizen you can apply for citizenship).
No. One of the rules is that you must be a natural born American citizen.
Odierno is Italian. In Italian, it literally means "of the day".
If you are a citizen of Rome, you have Italian citizenship, with all the rights and privileges that Italian citizenship encompasses.