Using the properties of SDSS DR7 QSOs catalog from Shen et al., the Baldwin effect, its slope evolution, the underlying drive for a large sample of 35019 QSOs with reliable spectral analysis are investigated. We find that the Baldwin effect exists in this large QSOs sample, which is almost the same in 11 different redshift bins, up to $zsim 5$. The slope is -0.238 by the BCES (civ EW depends on the continuum), -0.787 by the BCES bisector. For 11 redshift-bins, there is an increasing of the Baldwin effect slope from $zsim1.5$ to $zsim2.0$. From $zsim2.0$ to $zsim5.0$, the slope change is not clear considering their uncertainties or larger redshift bins. There is a strong correlation between the rest-frame civ EW and civ-based mbh while the relation between the civ EW and mgii-based mbh is very weak. With the correction of civ-based mbh from the civ blueshift relative to mgii, we suggest that this strong correlation is due to the bias of the civ-based mbh, with respect to that from the mgii line. Considering the mgii-based mbh, a medium strong correlation is found between the civ EW and the Eddington ratio, which implies that the Eddington ratio seems to be a better underlying physical parameter than the central black hole mass.