International audienceThe boundary layer theory for nonhydrostatic mountain waves presented in Part II is extended to include upward-propagating gravity waves and trapped lee waves. To do so, the background wind with constant shear used in Part II is smoothly curved and becomes constant above a “boundary layer” height d, which is much larger than the inner layer scale δ. As in Part II, the pressure drag stays well predicted by a gravity wave drag when the surface Richardson number J > 1 and by a form drag due to nonseparated sheltering when J 1) but situations characterized by positive and negative Reynolds stress now combine when J ∼ 1. In the latter case, and even when dissipation produces positive stress in the lower part of the inner l...