I pulled this discussion from the Lay vs. Lie thread:
BushMaid wrote:
Leandra Falconwing wrote:
Lady Eruwaedhiel wrote:
I always have trouble with "is" and "are". As in "neither of us are going anywhere" or "neither of us is going anywhere". Which is correct?  My parents don't agree on it either.
 My parents don't agree on it either. I believe it's "neither of us is going anywhere." The verb refers back to the "neither" not the prepositional phrase "of us."  *is a grammar freak*  

Hrm, I thought this went the other way. Because 'neither' is referring to more than one, as the 'us' indicates, I would have thought it "neither of us are going anywhere". I should study up on this! 

I looked it up in a grammar reference book. I'm not sure how helpful it was, except it did give me an idea. The verb needs to agree with the subject, and in this particular example the subject is implied, not stated. If you write it as "Neither 
one of us is going anywhere," it's pretty clear that the subject is singular. I can't currently think of a way to write it as a plural subject and still keep the "neither."  

 In my mind at least, neither is always used with a singular subject. Let me know if you look it up and come up with a different conclusion. 
