No they don't
the ä-sound is pronounced similar to the a- sound in English words like dare and airthe ch-sound is pronounced similar to the h-sound in English words like huge, humanDo bist dare'm'lich
In English, the letter "j" typically makes the "j" sound as in "jam" or "jump." However, there are some words where the letter "j" can sound like the letter "h." For example, in Spanish loanwords like "jalapeño" or "Juan," the "j" is pronounced as an "h" sound. This is due to the phonetic rules of the Spanish language influencing the pronunciation of these borrowed words in English.
There are no 3 letter words in the English language that begin with h and end with a.
There are very few words that end with the letter j. There are a few words that begin with h and r that end with j. However, there are no words in the English language that begin with i and end with j.
No English words meet that criteria. However, here are the words that end with J.3-letter wordshaj, raj, taj4-letter wordshadj6-letter wordssvaraj, swaraj6 words found.
The "j" in spanish is most like the English "h".
There are no three-letter English words that start with M and end with H.
In English, we use "a" instead of "an" before words that begin with a consonant sound. Even though "hotel" starts with the letter "h," it is pronounced with a consonant sound at the beginning (i.e., /h/ sound), so we say "a hotel" instead of "an hotel."
Informal: "Was möchtest du?" (pronounced: "vas mœçtəst doo")Formal: "Was möchten Sie?" (pronounced: "vas mœçtən zee")The ch-sound in möchten is pronounced as a drawn out h-sound as in the English words huge, humanThe ö-sound is similar to the vowel sounds in English words early, yearn but slightly shorter.
The English H sound would have been written with the uniliteral symbol  (shelter, Gardiner number o4)
An is used before h where the h is silent, as in an hour and an honor ( and in America, an herb). It may also be used before h-words not accented on the first syllable, as in an historian. This is because English resists an intervocalic h sound - there is no h sound in vehicle, for example - and so the h of historian may become silent in a phrase.
Zen (h does not make a sound)