I don't think so.
Michal is said with kh, not with k. But it might be. I don't know. But I don't even know how
Michal is normally pronounced in English. Say,
Michael in English is Mike-ull, in Hebrew it's MEE-khah-ell (this probably sounds utterly strange to you) so Biblical names with Kh sometimes are Englishised to K sounds. *shrugs*