Claudio Morra (born 22 January 1995) is an Italian footballer who plays for Lega Pro club Fidelis Andria, on loan from Torino.
Born in Savigliano, Piedmont, Morra started his career at Torino. He was one of the four overage player of the reserve team in 2014–15 season.
On 4 August Morra was signed by Lega Pro newcomer Fidelis Andria.
On 11 November 2015 he received his first Italy U20 team call-up, replacing Alessandro Piu who joined the U21 team. Morra were substitutes in the two matches. He also partnered with former Torino team-mate, forwards Mattia Aramu and Simone Rosso.
Morra can mean:
Morra is a frazione of the comune of Città di Castello in the Province of Perugia, Umbria, central Italy. It stands at an elevation of 306 metres above sea level. At the time of the Istat census of 2001 it had 263 inhabitants.
Morra is a hand game that dates back thousands of years to ancient Roman and Greek times. Each player simultaneously reveals their hand, extending any number of fingers, and calls out a number. Any player who successfully guesses the number of fingers revealed scores a point.
Morra can be played to decide issues, much as two people might toss a coin, or for entertainment.
While there are many variations of morra, most forms can be played with two, three, or more players. In the most popular version, all players throw out a single hand, each showing zero to five fingers, and call out loud their guess at what the sum of all fingers shown will be. If one player guesses the sum, that player earns one point. The first player to reach three points wins the game.
Some variants of morra involve money, with the winner earning a number of currency units equal to the sum of fingers displayed.
Morra was known to the ancient Romans and is popular around the world, especially in Italy. In the Bible, it may have been referred to as "casting lots". In ancient Rome, it was called micatio, and playing it was referred to as micare digitis; literally, "to flash with the fingers". As time passed, the name became morra, a corruption of the verb micare. The game was so common in ancient Rome that there was a proverb used to denote an honest person which made reference to it: dignus est quicum in tenebris mices, literally, "he is a worthy man with whom you could play micatio in the dark". Micatio became so common that it came to be used to settle disputes over the sale of merchandise in the Roman forum. This practice was eventually banned by Apronius, prefect of the city. Roman colonies were located in Europe, Asia and Africa.